Although aimed at computer science and mathematics students,[3][4] much of the book is accessible to a broader audience of mathematically-sophisticated readers with some background in high-school level geometry.[2][4]
Mathematical origami expert Tom Hull has called it "a must-read for anyone interested in the field of computational origami".[6]
It is a monograph rather than a textbook, and in particular does not include sets of exercises.[4]
The Basic Library List Committee of the Mathematical Association of America has recommended this book for inclusion in undergraduate mathematics libraries.[1]
Topics and organization
The book is organized into three sections, on linkages, origami, and polyhedra.[1][2]
The second section of the book concerns the mathematics of paper folding, and mathematical origami. It includes the NP-completeness of testing flat foldability,[2]
the problem of map folding (determining whether a pattern of mountain and valley folds forming a square grid can be folded flat),[2][4]
the work of Robert J. Lang using tree structures and circle packing to automate the design of origami folding patterns,[2][4]
the fold-and-cut theorem according to which any polygon can be constructed by folding a piece of paper and then making a single straight cut,[2][4]
origami-based angle trisection,[4]rigid origami,[2]
and the work of David A. Huffman on curved folds.[4]
In the third section, on polyhedra, the topics include polyhedral nets and Dürer's conjecture on their existence for convex polyhedra, the sets of polyhedra that have a given polygon as their net, Steinitz's theorem characterizing the graphs of polyhedra, Cauchy's theorem that every polyhedron, considered as a linkage of flat polygons, is rigid, and Alexandrov's uniqueness theorem stating that the three-dimensional shape of a convex polyhedron is uniquely determined by the metric space of geodesics on its surface.[4]
The book concludes with a more speculative chapter on higher-dimensional generalizations of the problems it discusses.[4]
^ abcdefghijklmnFasy, Brittany Terese; Millman, David L. (March 2011), "Review of Geometric Folding Algorithms", SIGACT News, 42 (1), Association for Computing Machinery: 43–46, doi:10.1145/1959045.1959056, S2CID6514501