desagonale
Desagonale is a term used in geometry to describe a class of simple polygons that admit a non-crossing triangulation organized as a fan from a single vertex. Specifically, a polygon is desagonale if there exists a vertex such that all diagonals drawn from that vertex to all nonadjacent vertices lie entirely within the polygon and partition it into triangles. This implies the polygon is star-shaped with respect to that vertex and has a kernel that includes that vertex.
In standard language, the property is of interest in studies of polygon triangulations and visibility because
Etymology: The form desagonale is formed from des- (Latin/Greek prefix) and gonal, drawing on the root for
Applications: Used in teaching triangulation algorithms, computer graphics, and computational geometry to illustrate fan triangulations and
See also: polygon triangulation, kernel of a polygon, star-shaped polygon, fan triangulation.
Note: Desagonale is not a standard term in most mathematical texts; its use is primarily pedagogical or