Lazy caterer's sequence

Lazy caterer's sequence

The lazy caterer's sequence, more formally known as the central polygonal numbers, describes the maximum number of pieces of a disk (a pancake or pizza is usually used to describe the situation) that can be made with a given number of straight cuts. For example, three cuts across a pancake will produce six pieces if the cuts all meet at a common point inside the circle, but up to seven if they do not. This problem can be formalized mathematically as one of counting the cells in an arrangement of lines; for generalizations to higher dimensions, see arrangement of hyperplanes.

Comment
enThe lazy caterer's sequence, more formally known as the central polygonal numbers, describes the maximum number of pieces of a disk (a pancake or pizza is usually used to describe the situation) that can be made with a given number of straight cuts. For example, three cuts across a pancake will produce six pieces if the cuts all meet at a common point inside the circle, but up to seven if they do not. This problem can be formalized mathematically as one of counting the cells in an arrangement of lines; for generalizations to higher dimensions, see arrangement of hyperplanes.
Depiction
Lazy Caterer's Sequence (Cuts).gif
PancakeCutThrice.agr.jpg
Has abstract
enThe lazy caterer's sequence, more formally known as the central polygonal numbers, describes the maximum number of pieces of a disk (a pancake or pizza is usually used to describe the situation) that can be made with a given number of straight cuts. For example, three cuts across a pancake will produce six pieces if the cuts all meet at a common point inside the circle, but up to seven if they do not. This problem can be formalized mathematically as one of counting the cells in an arrangement of lines; for generalizations to higher dimensions, see arrangement of hyperplanes. The analogue of this sequence in three dimensions is the cake number.
Is primary topic of
Lazy caterer's sequence
Label
enLazy caterer's sequence
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
webcourse.cs.technion.ac.il/236603/Spring2008/ho/WCFiles/Wetzel.pdf
web.archive.org/web/20110721134954/http:/webcourse.cs.technion.ac.il/236603/Spring2008/ho/WCFiles/Wetzel.pdf
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
1 (number)
106 (number)
11 (number)
121 (number)
137 (number)
154 (number)
16 (number)
172 (number)
191 (number)
2 (number)
211 (number)
22 (number)
29 (number)
37 (number)
4 (number)
46 (number)
56 (number)
67 (number)
7 (number)
79 (number)
92 (number)
Arithmetic progression
Arrangement of hyperplanes
Arrangement of lines
Bernoulli's triangle
Binomial coefficient
Cake number
Category:Articles containing proofs
Category:Integer sequences
Category:Mathematical optimization
Crelle's Journal
Disk (mathematics)
Dividing a circle into areas
File:Lazy Caterer's Sequence (Cuts).gif
File:PancakeCutThrice.agr.jpg
Floyd's triangle
Pancake
Pascal's triangle
Pizza
Recurrence relation
Sequence
Triangular number
SameAs
28Rj2
Lazy caterer's sequence
m.06gwdf
Numero poligonale centrale
Q2259070
Suite du traiteur paresseux
Teorema del cortador perezoso
Zentralpolygonale Zahlen
Центральные многоугольные числа
Центральні багатокутні числа
怠け仕出し屋の数列
Subject
Category:Articles containing proofs
Category:Integer sequences
Category:Mathematical optimization
Thumbnail
PancakeCutThrice.agr.jpg?width=300
Title
enCircle Division by Lines
Urlname
enCircleDivisionbyLines
WasDerivedFrom
Lazy caterer's sequence?oldid=1123903682&ns=0
WikiPageLength
7054
Wikipage page ID
2038304
Wikipage revision ID
1123903682
WikiPageUsesTemplate
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