Origamizer – Top-Rated

The results of the Origamizer look like alien blueprints. They are dense grids of lines that make no intuitive sense to the human eye, but they are mathematically perfect. For example, if you ask the Origamizer to fold a cube, it does not produce the simple 5-cross net you learned in school. Instead, it produces a complex series of diagonal pleats that tuck the extra paper into the center of the cube’s faces.

or deployable space equipment from flat sheets of metal or rigid panels. Complexity Origamizer

The is not a person; it is a groundbreaking piece of software developed by Japanese computer scientist Tomohiro Tachi. It is a computational algorithm (and software implementation) that solves one of the most complex problems in geometric theory: Given any polyhedral surface (a 3D shape made of flat faces), can we automatically compute the crease pattern needed to fold a single sheet of paper into that shape? The results of the Origamizer look like alien blueprints