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Meshing Infrastructure Workshop |
CMU
Website and Workshop Agenda
A Mini Roundtable for Sharing Meshing Infrastructure, Research, and Resources.
In the past decade there have been
many important theoretical advances in algorithm design for meshing related
problems, but only some of these have made it into meshing software. The goal
of this Mini Roundtable is to build a stronger link between the theory and practice
of meshing. The hope is both for the algorithms community to better understand
the needs of applications and for applications community to more rapidly integrate
algorithmic ideas into their software.
Towards this end it is important to develop a shared infrastructure that the
algorithms community can use to make it easier to prototype code for their ideas.
The infrastructure should include shared code, shared problem instances, and
documented file formats for representing various geometric structures. Interesting
research issues arise in deciding what some of the shared interfaces should
be. For examples, how should curves surfaces be represented?
The goal is to have this first workshop to discuss our current state, and discuss
possible ways to share infrastructure. Subgroups can then work on coming to
consensus on mechanisms for sharing. We plan to have a follow-on workshop a
year later to report back on results.
This workshop is supported in part by the CMU Aladdin Center (funded by NSF)
as part of a PROBlem-oriented Explorations (PROBEs). PROBEs study how theory
can be more rapidly integrated into practice. The Aladdin Center can also support
a repository for any shared code, interfaces, and working documents. There are
also some funds for visiting researchers, including undergraduate and graduate
students.