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  2. Even-hole-free graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Even-hole-free_graph

    While even-hole-free graphs can be recognized in polynomial time, it is NP-complete to determine whether a graph contains an even hole that includes a specific vertex. [ 3 ] It is unknown whether graph coloring and the maximum independent set problem can be solved in polynomial time on even-hole-free graphs, or whether they are NP-complete.

  3. Genus (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genus_(mathematics)

    Thus, a planar graph has genus 0, because it can be drawn on a sphere without self-crossing. The non-orientable genus of a graph is the minimal integer n such that the graph can be drawn without crossing itself on a sphere with n cross-caps (i.e. a non-orientable surface of (non-orientable) genus n). (This number is also called the demigenus.)

  4. Graph homology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_homology

    In algebraic topology and graph theory, graph homology describes the homology groups of a graph, where the graph is considered as a topological space. It formalizes the idea of the number of "holes" in the graph. It is a special case of a simplicial homology, as a graph is a special case of a simplicial complex. Since a finite graph is a 1 ...

  5. Chordal graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chordal_graph

    Chordal graphs are precisely the graphs that are both odd-hole-free and even-hole-free (see holes in graph theory). Every chordal graph is a strangulated graph , a graph in which every peripheral cycle is a triangle, because peripheral cycles are a special case of induced cycles.

  6. Induced path - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Induced_path

    The even-hole-free graphs are the graphs containing no induced cycles with an even number of vertices. The trivially perfect graphs are the graphs that have neither an induced path of length three nor an induced cycle of length four. By the strong perfect graph theorem, the perfect graphs are the graphs with no odd hole and no odd antihole.

  7. Cycle (graph theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cycle_(graph_theory)

    A chordal graph, a special type of perfect graph, has no holes of any size greater than three. The girth of a graph is the length of its shortest cycle; this cycle is necessarily chordless. Cages are defined as the smallest regular graphs with given combinations of degree and girth.

  8. Graph of a function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_of_a_function

    Given a function: from a set X (the domain) to a set Y (the codomain), the graph of the function is the set [4] = {(, ()):}, which is a subset of the Cartesian product.In the definition of a function in terms of set theory, it is common to identify a function with its graph, although, formally, a function is formed by the triple consisting of its domain, its codomain and its graph.

  9. Pair of pants (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pair_of_pants_(mathematics)

    This is a graph with vertex set the pants decompositions of , and two vertices are joined if they are related by an elementary move, which is one of the two following operations: take a curve α {\displaystyle \alpha } in the decomposition in a one-holed torus and replace it by a curve in the torus intersecting it only once,