quadtree
English
Etymology
From quad- + tree, coined by Raphael Finkel and J. L. Bentley in 1974.[1]
Noun
quadtree (plural quadtrees)
- A treelike data structure each of whose nodes has up to four children, most often used to partition a two-dimensional space by recursively subdividing it.
- 2015, Benny Bing, Next-Generation Video Coding and Streaming, John Wiley & Sons, →ISBN, page 127:
- H.265 employs a more flexible quadtree structure that refines motion search.
Translations
treelike data structure
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See also
References
- R. A. Finkel, J. L. Bentley (1974) “Quad trees a data structure for retrieval on composite keys”, in Acta Informatica, volume 4, number 1, , →ISSN, pages 1–9
Anagrams
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