Top station

A top station[1] or upper station[2] is usually the highest station of an aerial lift, a funicular, a T-bar lift or a rack railway. The lowest station is the valley station. Passengers or skiers usually alight at the top station.

Top stations on a cable car may be ordinary buildings with a docking bay or open steel structures. Gondola lifts have horizontally arranged top stations. The top stations on chair lifts may have a simple jump-off point or a more substantial design.

gollark: Does gcd.hs work then, somehow?
gollark: That's suspiciously simple then, hm.
gollark: What's `findRem` doing? Doesn't Haskell have a mod function?
gollark: It's going to have a fun feature where if it detects that you're running it *while* the uninstaller is open, it will subtly mess up your answers.
gollark: After realizing I had absolutely no idea how the "general number field sieve" and such worked, I just decided to implement Pollard's ρ one, but it requires gcd which Lua doesn't have, so I'm looking up the Euclidean algorithm.

References

  1. For example, see Predigtstuhl Cable Car at www.berchtesgaden.de. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  2. For example, see Chairlift Blausee (upper station) at www.outdooractive.com. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
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