amalgamation

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Motiejus Jakštys 2021-04-29 18:08:21 +03:00
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@ -283,13 +283,29 @@ direction are topographic:
bends over a relatively long distance) implies greater slope, more
water, and/or faster flow.
\item Bendy river, on the contrary, implies slower flow, smaller slope,
\item Bendy river, on the contrary, implies slower flow, slighter slope,
and/or less water.
\end{itemize}
Both {\VW} and {\DP} have a tendency to remove the small bends altogether,
which is a valuable characterization of the river. Therefore, a more robust
Both {\VW} and {\DP} have a tendency to remove the small bends altogether, a
valuable characterization of the river.
Sometimes low-water rivers in slender slopes have many bends next to each
other. In low resolutions (either in small-DPI screens or paper, or when the
river is sufficiently zoomed out, or both), the small bends will amalgamate to
a unintelligible blob. Figure~\onpage{fig:amalgamate1} and
figure~\onpage{fig:amalgamate2} are real-world examples where a river, normally
1 or 2 pixels wide, creates a few pixels wide blob due to a number of bends.
\begin{figure}[h]
\includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{amalgamate1}
\caption{Narrow bends amalgamating into large unintelligible blobs}
\label{fig:pixel-amalgamation}
\end{figure}
Therefore, a more robust
generalization algorithm is worthwhile for lookout.
\subsubsection{Modern approaches}