User:David Eppstein
I'm a computer science professor at UC Irvine, in Orange County, California. See my home page, Mastodon account, blog, or even my Wikipedia article for more about me.
Much of my Wikipedia editing is on mathematics articles, but I've also edited articles on computer science, academic biography, the arts, and California geography, among many other topics. I've also contributed many diagrams and photographs to Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons.
As an employee of a public university I believe that public outreach is part of my job description, and in that sense that my edits here to subjects within my professional expertise are paid edits. However, the topics and content of my editing here are wide-ranging and entirely self-directed. I neither participate in, nor condone, paid edits for specific articles or specific content.
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Wikibooks
Click on the titles, not on the cover images!
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- ... that Jenya Kazbekova, a competition climber on the Ukraine's 2024 Olympic team, is the daughter and granddaughter of competition climbing medalists? (24.08)
- ... that electrical engineering professor Mariesa Crow raises alpacas? (24.08)
- ... that Piper Kelly secured her position as a competitor in speed climbing at the 2024 Olympics by reaching the final race at the 2023 Pan American Games, before winning the race? (24.08)
- ... that although the icosian game was advertised as a "highly amusing game for the drawing room", it was too easy to play and not a commercial success? (24.05)
- ... that the discovery of Descartes' theorem in geometry came from a too-difficult mathematics problem posed to a princess? (24.04)
- .. that Latvian-Soviet artist Karlis Johansons exhibited a skeletal tensegrity form of the Schönhardt polyhedron seven years before Erich Schönhardt's 1928 paper on its mathematics? (24.02)
Good articles
- 17-animal inheritance puzzle – Mathematical puzzle
- Alexandrov's uniqueness theorem – Polyhedra are determined by surface distance
- antiparallelogram – Polygon with four crossed edges of two lengths
- Mark Barr – English-American inventor and polymath (1871–1950)
- Beckman–Quarles theorem – Unit-distance-preserving maps are isometries
- binary logarithm – Exponent of a power of two
- binary tiling – Tiling of the hyperbolic plane
- BIT predicate – Test of a specified bit in a binary number
- book embedding – Graph layout on multiple half-planes
- Borromean rings – Three linked but pairwise separated rings
- bucket queue – Data structure for integer priorities
- Cairo pentagonal tiling – Tiling of the plane by pentagons
- Cantor's isomorphism theorem – Uniqueness of countable dense linear orders
- Cartesian tree – Binary tree derived from a sequence of numbers
- clique problem – Task of computing complete subgraphs
- component (graph theory) – Maximal subgraph whose vertices can reach each other
- constructible number – Number constructible via compass and straightedge
- convex curve – Type of plane curve
- convex hull – Smallest convex set containing a given set
- cop-win graph – Type of graph related to pursuit–evasion
- curve of constant width – Shape with width independent of orientation
- curve-shortening flow – Motion of a curve based on its curvature
- De Bruijn–Erdős theorem (graph theory) – On coloring infinite graphs
- De quinque corporibus regularibus – 15th century book on polyhedra
- Descartes' theorem – Equation for radii of tangent circles
- Dehn invariant – Value determined from a polyhedron
- directed acyclic graph – Directed graph with no directed cycles
- double bubble theorem – On smallest surface enclosing two volumes
- Doyle spiral – Circle packing arranged in spirals
- dual graph – Graph representing faces of another graph
- dyadic rational – Fraction with denominator a power of two
- Earth–Moon problem – Unsolved problem on graph coloring
- Erdős–Anning theorem – On sets of points with integer distances
- Erdős–Ko–Rado theorem – Upper bound on intersecting set families
- Erdős–Straus conjecture – On unit fractions adding to 4/n
- Euclid–Euler theorem – Characterization of even perfect numbers
- Euclidean distance – Length of a line segment
- Euclidean minimum spanning tree – Shortest network connecting points
- factorial – Product of numbers from 1 to n
- farthest-first traversal – Sequence of points far from previous points
- feedback arc set – Edges that hit all cycles in a graph
- Fermat's right triangle theorem – Rational right triangles cannot have square area
- Fibonacci nim – Game of taking coins from a pile
- free abelian group – Algebra of formal sums
- Gale–Shapley algorithm – Procedure for finding a stable matching
- Garden of Eden (cellular automaton) – Pattern that has no predecessors
- Andrew M. Gleason – American mathematician and educator
- Ronald Graham – American mathematician (1935–2020)
- Halin graph – Mathematical tree with cycle through leaves
- handshaking lemma – Every graph has evenly many odd vertices
- harmonic series (mathematics) – Divergent sum of all positive unit fractions
- Heilbronn triangle problem – On point sets with no small-area triangles
- C. Doris Hellman – American historian of science (1910–1973)
- Herschel graph – Bipartite non-Hamiltonian polyhedral graph
- hyperbolic spiral – Spiral asymptotic to a line
- icosian game – Game of finding cycles on a dodecahedron
- ideal polyhedron – Shape in hyperbolic geometry
- infinity symbol – Mathematical symbol representing infinity
- integer sorting – Computational task of sorting whole numbers
- isosceles triangle – Triangle with at least two sides congruent
- Vojtěch Jarník – Czech mathematician
- Jessen's icosahedron – Right-angled non-convex polyhedron
- Kawasaki's theorem – Description of flat one-vertex origami
- Keller's conjecture – Geometry problem on tiling by hypercubes
- Kepler triangle – Right triangle related to the golden ratio
- kite (geometry) – Quadrilateral symmetric across a diagonal
- Harry R. Lewis – American computer scientist (born 1947)
- Laves graph – Periodic spatial graph
- linear probing – Computer programming method for hashing
- logic of graphs – Logical formulation of graph properties
- Malfatti circles – Three tangent circles in a triangle
- midsphere – Sphere tangent to every edge of a polyhedron
- Möbius strip – Non-orientable surface with one edge
- mutilated chessboard problem – On domino tiling after removing two corners
- nearest-neighbor chain algorithm – Stack-based method for clustering
- no-three-in-line problem – Geometry problem on grid points
- opaque set – Shape that blocks all lines of sight
- ordered Bell number – Number of weak orderings
- paper fortune teller – Origami toy used for various children's games
- perfect graph – Graph with tight clique-coloring relation
- Pick's theorem – Formula for area of a grid polygon
- polygonalization – Polygon through a set of points
- prime number – Number divisible only by 1 or itself
- Prince Rupert's cube – Cube that fits through hole in smaller cube
- pseudoforest – Graph with at most one cycle per component
- Pythagorean tiling – Tiling by squares of two sizes
- quadrisecant – Line through four points of a curve
- Rado graph – Infinite graph containing all countable graphs
- random binary tree – Binary tree selected at random
- regular number – Numbers that evenly divide powers of 60
- Reuleaux triangle – Curved triangle with constant width
- reversible cellular automaton – Cellular automaton that can be run backwards
- rook's graph – Graph of chess rook moves
- Klaus Roth – British mathematician (1925–2015)
- Rule 90 – Elementary cellular automaton
- Rule 184 – Elementary cellular automaton
- Schönhardt polyhedron – Non-convex polyhedron with no triangulation
- Schwarz lantern – Near-cylindrical polyhedron with large area
- selection algorithm – Method for finding kth smallest value
- Shapley–Folkman lemma – Sums of sets of vectors are nearly convex
- simple polygon – Shape bounded by non-intersecting line segments
- small set expansion hypothesis – Computational hardness assumption
- snark (graph theory) – 3-regular graph with no 3-edge-coloring
- square-difference-free set – Numbers whose differences are not squares
- square pyramidal number – Number of stacked spheres in a pyramid
- squaring the circle – Problem of constructing equal-area shapes
- Stars (M. C. Escher) – Wood engraving print by M. C. Escher
- Steinitz's theorem – Graph-theoretic description of polyhedra
- Carl Størmer – Norwegian geophysicist and mathematician
- Sylvester–Gallai theorem – Existence of a line through two points
- Sylvester's sequence – Doubly exponential integer sequence
- telephone number (mathematics) – Number of ways to pair up n objects
- Theil–Sen estimator – Statistical method for fitting a line
- three-gap theorem – On distances between points on a circle
- three utilities problem – Mathematical puzzle of avoiding crossings
- triaugmented triangular prism – Convex polyhedron with 14 triangle faces
- Turán's brick factory problem – On minimizing crossings in bicliques
- 2-satisfiability – Logic problem, AND of pairwise ORs
- unit distance graph – Geometric graph with unit edge lengths
- unit fraction – One over a whole number
- universal vertex – Vertex adjacent to all others in a graph
- Viète's formula – Infinite product converging to 2/π
- well-covered graph – Graph with equal-size maximal independent sets
- widest path problem – Path-finding using high-weight graph edges
- witch of Agnesi – Cubic plane curve
- X + Y sorting – Problem of sorting pairs of numbers by their sum
- YBC 7289 – Babylonian mathematical clay tablet
- Znám's problem – On divisibility among sets of integers
See also
- Stuff I've changed, other stuff I've done stuff to, and stuff I'd like to do
- Featured pictures (as nominator, not creator): Bill Hosokawa at the Heart Mountain Relocation Center, Street Musicians at the Door
- Spiky things
This user is a participant in WikiProject Mathematics. |
CS | This user is a participant in WikiProject Computer science. |
This user is a member of WikiProject Academic Journals. |
This user is a participant in WikiProject Women in Red (redlinks→blue) |
This user teaches at a university or other institution of higher education. |
OC | This user lives in Orange County, California. |
they | This user considers singular they standard English usage. |
, | This user fixes comma-splices; they are annoying. |
This user is an administrator on the English Wikipedia. (verify) |
This user has been a member of Wikipedia since August 2006. |
This user contributes images to Wikimedia Commons. |