Untitled edit

It would be fun to add a section Cuboctahedra in the arts, if anyone can remember which episode of Old Star Trek had the badguys zap some of the crew into the form of little plaster cubocs. --Anton Sherwood 01:33, 13 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

It was By Any Other Name. Joule36e5 (talk) 22:18, 18 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Then there's the legendary Coriolis stations in Elite. olofito 01:17, 29 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

Geometric relations edit

I think "L1 ball" means a regular cross-polytope. —Tamfang 06:42, 22 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Thanks, made the change (that sentence was my very first wikipedia contribution!). In other matters, it seems this section can use some cleaning up. The "Dymaxion" sentence, while interesting, doesn't seem to qualify as a geometric relation. There are statements about Johnson solids that are separated and should probably be together. Dshin

surface area edit

User:Ptah changed

 

to

 

Eight triangles of unit base and height √3/2 gives 8*√3/4 = 2√3, not 4√3. Have I missed something? —Tamfang (talk) 08:23, 22 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Should we use jpg or svg? edit

Here's comparison:

jpg svg png
     

Professor M. Fiendish 05:16, 23 August 2009 (UTC)Reply

rival coordinates edit

User:KoenDelaere changed the vertex coordinates to

(±√2,0,0)
(0,±√2,0)
(±1/√2,±1/√2,±1)

User:Tomruen reverted to (±1,±1,0) and its permutations, which are preferred because they're more symmetric; but I'd like to mention for the record that KoenDelaere's version is not wrong – it's an eighth-rotation in (x,y). —Tamfang (talk) 01:57, 1 March 2010 (UTC)Reply

Schläfli symbol edit

The table at the top right of the article ought, I think, to give its Schläfli symbol as   , by analogy with icosidodecahedron. I would change it, but I can't figure out how to get at the table for editing purposes. Maproom (talk) 12:32, 27 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

There's different notations, see Uniform_polyhedron#Wythoff_construction_operators. They should be consistent in the tables, so I changed it. Tom Ruen (talk) 19:51, 27 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Application in cell biology edit

Amazingly, the cuboctahedron (and a few other recognizable geometric shapes, but mostly cuboctahedra) is the shape taken by "COPII" proteins when they are transported from the "endoplasmic reticulum" to the "golgi apparatus" http://www.nature.com/nrm/journal/v7/n10/images/nrm2025-f2.jpg — Preceding unsigned comment added by 129.215.109.69 (talk) 12:58, 18 September 2015 (UTC)Reply

A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion edit

The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion:

Participate in the deletion discussion at the nomination page. —Community Tech bot (talk) 17:53, 18 May 2019 (UTC)Reply

Correction to "Dissection" section, object shown is a square pyramid, not cuboctahedron edit

(This is the bad section) The cuboctahedron can be dissected into 6 square pyramids and 8 tetrahedra meeting at a central point. This dissection is expressed in the tetrahedral-octahedral honeycomb where pairs of square pyramids are combined into octahedra. Glenneric1 (talk) 13:10, 27 March 2023 (UTC)Reply

It's a square dipyramid, dissected into cells of the lattice mentioned in the second sentence. A picture of a dissected CO would still be good. —Tamfang (talk) 05:51, 5 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

In https://archive.org/details/intertwined_polysigned_p3_on_the_equator is possible to look an cuboctahedron compared to the hull made with triangles, similar to the icosidodecahedron