In geometry, two edges of a polygon may cross or even overlap in general. A simple polygon is a polygon which does not intersect itself anywhere. These are also called Jordan polygons, because the Jordan curve theorem can be used to prove that such a polygon divides the plane into two regions, the region inside it and the region outside it.
A polygon that is not simple is a complex polygon, and does not always have a well-defined inside and outside. A simple polygon is topologically equivalent to a disk.
In computational geometry, there are several important problems where the given input is a simple polygon, each depending critically on its well-defined interior:
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