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  2. Doubly connected edge list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doubly_connected_edge_list

    The doubly connected edge list (DCEL), also known as half-edge data structure, is a data structure to represent an embedding of a planar graph in the plane, and polytopes in 3D. This data structure provides efficient manipulation of the topological information associated with the objects in question (vertices, edges, faces).

  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. 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 ...

  5. Euler tour technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler_tour_technique

    For each undirected edge {u,v} in the tree, insert (u,v) and (v,u) in the edge list. Sort the edge list lexicographically. (Here we assume that the nodes of the tree are ordered, and that the root is the first element in this order.) Construct adjacency lists for each node (called next) and a map from nodes to the first entries of the adjacency ...

  6. Adjacency matrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adjacency_matrix

    They can, for example, be used to represent sparse graphs without incurring the space overhead from storing the many zero entries in the adjacency matrix of the sparse graph. In the following section the adjacency matrix is assumed to be represented by an array data structure so that zero and non-zero entries are all directly represented in ...

  7. Planar straight-line graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planar_straight-line_graph

    An example of 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]

  8. Shortest path problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shortest_path_problem

    Shortest path (A, C, E, D, F), blue, between vertices A and F in the weighted directed graph. In graph theory, the shortest path problem is the problem of finding a path between two vertices (or nodes) in a graph such that the sum of the weights of its constituent edges is minimized.

  9. Graph (abstract data type) - Wikipedia

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

    In computer science, a graph is an abstract data type that is meant to implement the undirected graph and directed graph concepts from the field of graph theory within mathematics. A graph data structure consists of a finite (and possibly mutable) set of vertices (also called nodes or points ), together with a set of unordered pairs of these ...