scholarly journals One-Bend Drawings of Outerplanar Graphs Inside Simple Polygons

Author(s):  
Patrizio Angelini ◽  
Philipp Kindermann ◽  
Andre Löffler ◽  
Lena Schlipf ◽  
Antonios Symvonis
Algorithmica ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Édouard Bonnet ◽  
Nidhi Purohit

AbstractA resolving set S of a graph G is a subset of its vertices such that no two vertices of G have the same distance vector to S. The Metric Dimension problem asks for a resolving set of minimum size, and in its decision form, a resolving set of size at most some specified integer. This problem is NP-complete, and remains so in very restricted classes of graphs. It is also W[2]-complete with respect to the size of the solution. Metric Dimension has proven elusive on graphs of bounded treewidth. On the algorithmic side, a polynomial time algorithm is known for trees, and even for outerplanar graphs, but the general case of treewidth at most two is open. On the complexity side, no parameterized hardness is known. This has led several papers on the topic to ask for the parameterized complexity of Metric Dimension with respect to treewidth. We provide a first answer to the question. We show that Metric Dimension parameterized by the treewidth of the input graph is W[1]-hard. More refinedly we prove that, unless the Exponential Time Hypothesis fails, there is no algorithm solving Metric Dimension in time $$f(\text {pw})n^{o(\text {pw})}$$ f ( pw ) n o ( pw ) on n-vertex graphs of constant degree, with $$\text {pw}$$ pw the pathwidth of the input graph, and f any computable function. This is in stark contrast with an FPT algorithm of Belmonte et al. (SIAM J Discrete Math 31(2):1217–1243, 2017) with respect to the combined parameter $$\text {tl}+\Delta$$ tl + Δ , where $$\text {tl}$$ tl is the tree-length and $$\Delta$$ Δ the maximum-degree of the input graph.


2012 ◽  
Vol 436 (9) ◽  
pp. 3701-3720
Author(s):  
John Sinkovic ◽  
Mark Kempton

2004 ◽  
Vol 281 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 209-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenjie He ◽  
Jiaojiao Wu ◽  
Xuding Zhu

Author(s):  
S. Miao ◽  
D. Howard

Abstract This paper presents an efficient algorithm for determining the intersection of two simple polygons. The proposed algorithm is based on the idea of searching for the vertices of the intersection polygon vertex by vertex along the boundary in a clockwise direction. This method finds the intersection polygon vertices and their order in one pass. The algorithm almost eliminates the need for testing whether candidate vertices are inside both polygons and the sorting stage is no longer needed.


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