First public release version

This commit is contained in:
Sven Schönherr 1997-05-27 16:46:36 +00:00
parent dacc3e7ee0
commit 02e24c3aef
2 changed files with 4 additions and 4 deletions

View File

@ -195,7 +195,7 @@ for the STL sequence containers \ccc{vector<Point>} and \ccc{list<Point>}.
returns the \ccc{i}-th support point of \ccVar. Between two
insert operations any call to \ccVar\ccc{.support_point(i)}
with the same \ccc{i} returns the same point.
\ccPrecond $0 \leq i <$ \ccVar\ccc{.number_of_support_points()}.}
\ccPrecond $0 \leq i< \mbox{\ccVar\ccc{.number_of_support_points()}}$.}
\ccMemberFunction{ Circle circle( ) const;}{
returns a circle with same center and same squared radius
@ -238,7 +238,7 @@ bounded side, i.e.\ its unbounded side equals the whole plane $\E_2$.
% -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
\ccHeading{Modifiers}
New points can be added to an existing $\ccVar$, allowing to build
New points can be added to an existing \ccVar, allowing to build
$mc(P)$ incrementally, e.g.\ if $P$ is not known in advance. Compared
to the direct creation of $mc(P)$, this is not much slower, because
the construction method is incremental itself.

View File

@ -195,7 +195,7 @@ for the STL sequence containers \ccc{vector<Point>} and \ccc{list<Point>}.
returns the \ccc{i}-th support point of \ccVar. Between two
insert operations any call to \ccVar\ccc{.support_point(i)}
with the same \ccc{i} returns the same point.
\ccPrecond $0 \leq i <$ \ccVar\ccc{.number_of_support_points()}.}
\ccPrecond $0 \leq i< \mbox{\ccVar\ccc{.number_of_support_points()}}$.}
\ccMemberFunction{ Circle circle( ) const;}{
returns a circle with same center and same squared radius
@ -238,7 +238,7 @@ bounded side, i.e.\ its unbounded side equals the whole plane $\E_2$.
% -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
\ccHeading{Modifiers}
New points can be added to an existing $\ccVar$, allowing to build
New points can be added to an existing \ccVar, allowing to build
$mc(P)$ incrementally, e.g.\ if $P$ is not known in advance. Compared
to the direct creation of $mc(P)$, this is not much slower, because
the construction method is incremental itself.