that demonstrate the usage. The first example stores the coordinates of the input points
in a two-dimensional array, the second example uses a list of vectors to show how generic
containers can be used.
Credits: Aditya Gupta and Alexandros Konstantinakis-Karmis have significantly contributed to this version of the software.
The miniball software is available under the
GNU General Public License (GPLv3). If
your intended use is not compliant with this license, please buy a
commercial license (EUR 500).
You need a license if the software that you develop using
Miniball V3.0 is not open source.
Changes from previous versions.
The theory behind the miniball
software (Proc. 7th Annual European Symposium on Algorithms (ESA), Lecture
Notes in Computer Science 1643, Springer-Verlag, pp.325-338, 1999).