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  2. Planar graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planar_graph

    A planar graph is said to be convex if all of its faces (including the outer face) are convex polygons. Not all planar graphs have a convex embedding (e.g. the complete bipartite graph K 2,4). A sufficient condition that a graph can be drawn convexly is that it is a subdivision of a 3-vertex-connected planar graph.

  3. Planar straight-line graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planar_straight-line_graph

    In computational geometry and geometric graph theory, a planar straight-line graph (or straight-line plane graph, or plane straight-line graph), in short PSLG, is an embedding of a planar graph in the plane such that its edges are mapped into straight-line segments. [1] Fáry's theorem (1948) states that every planar graph has this kind of ...

  4. Fáry's theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fáry's_theorem

    In the mathematical field of graph theory, Fáry's theorem states that any simple, planar graph can be drawn without crossings so that its edges are straight line segments. That is, the ability to draw graph edges as curves instead of as straight line segments does not allow a larger class of graphs to be drawn.

  5. Goldner–Harary graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goldner–Harary_graph

    The Goldner–Harary graph is a planar graph: it can be drawn in the plane with none of its edges crossing. When drawn on a plane, all its faces are triangular, making it a maximal planar graph. As with every maximal planar graph, it is also 3-vertex-connected: the removal of any two of its vertices leaves a connected subgraph.

  6. Mac Lane's planarity criterion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mac_Lane's_planarity_criterion

    One direction of the characterisation states that every planar graph has a 2-basis. Such a basis may be found as the collection of boundaries of the bounded faces of a planar embedding of the given graph G. If an edge is a bridge of G, it appears twice on a single face boundary and therefore has a zero coordinate in the corresponding vector ...

  7. Planarization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planarization

    [1] [4] Alternatively, if it is expected that the planar subgraph will include almost all of the edges of the given graph, leaving only a small number k of non-planar edges for the incremental planarization process, then one can solve the problem exactly by using a fixed-parameter tractable algorithm whose running time is linear in the graph ...

  8. Multiple representations (mathematics education) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_representations...

    In mathematics education, a representation is a way of encoding an idea or a relationship, and can be both internal (e.g., mental construct) and external (e.g., graph). Thus multiple representations are ways to symbolize, to describe and to refer to the same mathematical entity. They are used to understand, to develop, and to communicate ...

  9. Apollonian network - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollonian_network

    An Apollonian network is a maximal planar graph in which all of the blocks are isomorphic to the complete graph K 4. In extremal graph theory, Apollonian networks are also exactly the n-vertex planar graphs in which the number of blocks achieves its maximum, n − 3, and the planar graphs in which the number of triangles achieves its maximum ...