In geometry, an apeirogonal prism or infinite prism is the arithmetic limit of the family of prisms; it can be considered an infinite polyhedron or a tiling of the plane.[1]
Thorold Gosset called it a 2-dimensional semi-check, like a single row of a checkerboard.
If the sides are squares, it is a uniform tiling. If colored with two sets of alternating squares it is still uniform.
The apeirogonal tiling is the arithmetic limit of the family of prisms t or p.4.4, as p tends to infinity, thereby turning the prism into a Euclidean tiling.
An alternation operation can create an apeirogonal antiprism composed of three triangles and one apeirogon at each vertex.
Similarly to the uniform polyhedra and the uniform tilings, eight uniform tilings may be based from the regular apeirogonal tiling. The rectified and cantellated forms are duplicated, and as two times infinity is also infinity, the truncated and omnitruncated forms are also duplicated, therefore reducing the number of unique forms to four: the apeirogonal tiling, the apeirogonal hosohedron, the apeirogonal prism, and the apeirogonal antiprism.