Random IFS

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The diameter of a set is the maximum distance between any pair of points in the set.
For example, the diameter of a circle is just the common notion of diameter; the diameter of a square is the diagonal length of the square.
Some diameters
Because all the IFS rules are contractions, the diameter of a region of address length N goes to 0 as N goes to infinity.
We illustrate this with the four transformations
T3(x, y) = (x/2, y/2) + (0, 1/2) T4(x, y) = (x/2, y/2) + (1/2, 1/2)
T1(x, y) = (x/2, y/2) T2(x, y) = (x/2, y/2) + (1/2, 0)
As an IFS, these generate the unit square, S. We see
  diam(S) = √2
  diam(Ti(S)) = (√2)/2
  diam(TjTi(S)) = (√2)/4
and in general
  diam(TiN...Ti1(S)) = (√2)/(2N)
Consequently, diam(TiN...Ti1(S)) → 0 as N → ∞.

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