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  2. Trivial Graph Format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trivial_Graph_Format

    If the edge has a label, it appears on the same line after the endpoint IDs. [3] The graph may be interpreted as a directed or undirected graph. For directed graphs, to specify the concept of bi-directionality in an edge, one may either specify two edges (forward and back) or differentiate the edge by means of a label.

  3. Adjacency list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adjacency_list

    An adjacency list representation for a graph associates each vertex in the graph with the collection of its neighbouring vertices or edges. There are many variations of this basic idea, differing in the details of how they implement the association between vertices and collections, in how they implement the collections, in whether they include both vertices and edges or only vertices as first ...

  4. Graph (abstract data type) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_(abstract_data_type)

    A representation of adjacent vertices via hash tables leads to an amortized average time complexity of () to test adjacency of two given vertices and to remove an edge and an amortized average time complexity [7] of (⁡ ()) to remove a given vertex x of degree ⁡ (). The time complexity of the other operations and the asymptotic space ...

  5. Edge list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edge_list

    An edge list is a data structure used to represent a graph as a list of its edges. An (unweighted) edge is defined by its start and end vertex, so each edge may be represented by two numbers. [1] The entire edge list may be represented as a two-column matrix. [2] [3] An edge list may be considered a variation on an adjacency list which is ...

  6. Graph database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graph_database

    To further illustrate, imagine a relational model with two tables: a people table (which has a person_id and person_name column) and a friend table (with friend_id and person_id, which is a foreign key from the people table). In this case, searching for all of Jack's friends would result in the following SQL query.

  7. Winged edge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winged_edge

    It serves adjacency queries in constant time with little storage overhead. This rich form of specifying an unstructured grid is in contrast to simpler specifications of polygon meshes such as a node and element list, or the implied connectivity of a regular grid. An alternative to the winged edge data structure is the Half-edge data structure.

  8. Nested set model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nested_set_model

    The nested set model is a technique for representing nested set collections (also known as trees or hierarchies) in relational databases.. It is based on Nested Intervals, that "are immune to hierarchy reorganization problem, and allow answering ancestor path hierarchical queries algorithmically — without accessing the stored hierarchy relation".

  9. Talk:Adjacency list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Adjacency_list

    It's easy to find all vertices adjacent to a given vertex in an adjacency list representation; you simply read its adjacency list. With an adjacency matrix you must instead scan over an entire row, taking O(n) time. If you, instead, want to know if two given vertices have an edge between them, this can be determined at once with an adjacency ...