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  2. Eulerian path - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eulerian_path

    An Eulerian trail, [note 1] or Euler walk, in an undirected graph is a walk that uses each edge exactly once. If such a walk exists, the graph is called traversable or semi-eulerian. [3] An Eulerian cycle, [note 1] also called an Eulerian circuit or Euler tour, in an undirected graph is a cycle that uses each edge exactly once

  3. Euler diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler_diagram

    For example, connectedness of zones might be enforced, or concurrency of curves or multiple points might be banned, as might tangential intersection of curves. In the adjacent diagram, examples of small Venn diagrams are transformed into Euler diagrams by sequences of transformations; some of the intermediate diagrams have concurrency of curves.

  4. Eulerian matroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eulerian_matroid

    For planar graphs, the properties of being Eulerian and bipartite are dual: a planar graph is Eulerian if and only if its dual graph is bipartite. As Welsh showed, this duality extends to binary matroids: a binary matroid is Eulerian if and only if its dual matroid is a bipartite matroid, a matroid in which every circuit has even cardinality.

  5. Euler tour technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euler_tour_technique

    The Euler tour technique (ETT), named after Leonhard Euler, is a method in graph theory for representing trees. The tree is viewed as a directed graph that contains two directed edges for each edge in the tree. The tree can then be represented as a Eulerian circuit of the directed graph, known as the Euler tour representation (ETR) of the tree

  6. Seven Bridges of Königsberg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Bridges_of_Königsberg

    Euler's recognition that the key information was the number of bridges and the list of their endpoints (rather than their exact positions) presaged the development of topology. The difference between the actual layout and the graph schematic is a good example of the idea that topology is not concerned with the rigid shape of objects.

  7. BEST theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BEST_theorem

    In 1736, Euler showed that G has an Eulerian circuit if and only if G is connected and the indegree is equal to outdegree at every vertex. In this case G is called Eulerian. We denote the indegree of a vertex v by deg(v). The BEST theorem states that the number ec(G) of Eulerian circuits in a connected Eulerian graph G is given by the formula

  8. Planar graph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planar_graph

    Euler's formula states that if a finite, connected, planar graph is drawn in the plane without any edge intersections, and v is the number of vertices, e is the number of edges and f is the number of faces (regions bounded by edges, including the outer, infinitely large region), then

  9. Chinese postman problem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_postman_problem

    After corresponding edges are added (red), the length of the Eulerian circuit is found. In graph theory and combinatorial optimization , Guan's route problem , the Chinese postman problem , postman tour or route inspection problem is to find a shortest closed path or circuit that visits every edge of an (connected) undirected graph at least once.