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hypercube

/ ˈhaɪpəˌkjuːb /

noun

  1. maths a figure in a space of four or more dimensions having all its sides equal and all its angles right angles
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


hypercube

/ pər-kyo̅o̅b′ /

  1. An object resembling a three dimensional cube but having an arbitrary number of dimensions (typically more than three, although cubes and squares can be considered hypercubes in three and two dimensions). Each corner or node of a hypercube is equidistant from every other. The number of corners in a hypercube is equal to 2 n, where n is the number of dimensions. Diagrams and models of hypercubes of four or more dimensions are not real hypercubes any more than a diagram of a cube is an actual cube, but they do depict the manner in which the corner points are connected.
  2. See also tesseract
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Example Sentences

I.F.C.A. also partnered last year with Hypercube — a saxophone, guitar, piano and percussion quartet — to give a pair of concerts with music inspired by the poetry of the Iranian poet Forough Farrokhzad, first as part of the Kennedy Center’s Direct Current Festival, and later at Roulette in Brooklyn.

“It was a mutually beneficial experience for this collective to go out of their way and help us program,” said Erin Rogers, Hypercube’s saxophonist.

Hypercube is now working with Ms. Fallah to develop an expanded version of “In the Empty Echo,” which they premiered last year.

Other Kickstarted products include the Sanho HyperCube, which lets you add USB and microSD storage to your phone charger, and the the HyperJuice USB-C battery pack, which was the first to support the 100W USB-C Power Delivery 3.0 Profile.

It’s delivered on Kickstarter promises before, and there’s already a product on the market, the Maktar Qubii, that does much the same thing as the HyperCube.

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hypercriticismhyperdactylia