In
discrete mathematics, a direction-preserving function (or mapping) is a function on a discrete space, such as the integer grid, that (informally) does not change too drastically between two adjacent points. It can be considered a discrete analogue of a
continuous function.
The concept was first defined by Iimura.
Some variants of it were later defined by Yang,
Chen and Deng,
Herings, van-der-Laan, Talman and Yang,
and others.
Basic concepts
We focus on functions
, where the domain X is a finite subset of the Euclidean space
. ch(''X'') denotes the
convex hull of ''X''.
There are many variants of direction-preservation properties, depending on how exactly one defines the "drastic change" and the "adjacent points". Regarding the "drastic change" there are two main variants:
* ''Direction preservation'' (DP) means that, if ''x'' and ''y'' are adjacent, then for all