447 research outputs found

    Filling the complexity gaps for colouring planar and bounded degree graphs.

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    We consider a natural restriction of the List Colouring problem, k-Regular List Colouring, which corresponds to the List Colouring problem where every list has size exactly k. We give a complete classification of the complexity of k-Regular List Colouring restricted to planar graphs, planar bipartite graphs, planar triangle-free graphs and to planar graphs with no 4-cycles and no 5-cycles. We also give a complete classification of the complexity of this problem and a number of related colouring problems for graphs with bounded maximum degree

    Colouring diamond-free graphs

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    The Colouring problem is that of deciding, given a graph G and an integer k, whether G admits a (proper) k-colouring. For all graphs H up to five vertices, we classify the computational complexity of Colouring for (diamond,H)-free graphs. Our proof is based on combining known results together with proving that the clique-width is bounded for (diamond,P_1+2P_2)-free graphs. Our technique for handling this case is to reduce the graph under consideration to a k-partite graph that has a very specific decomposition. As a by-product of this general technique we are also able to prove boundedness of clique-width for four other new classes of (H_1,H_2)-free graphs. As such, our work also continues a recent systematic study into the (un)boundedness of clique-width of (H_1,H_2)-free graphs, and our five new classes of bounded clique-width reduce the number of open cases from 13 to 8

    Clique-width of graph classes defined by two forbidden induced subgraphs

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    If a graph has no induced subgraph isomorphic to any graph in a finite family {H1,…,Hp}, it is said to be (H1,…,Hp)-free. The class of H-free graphs has bounded clique-width if and only if H is an induced subgraph of the 4-vertex path P4. We study the (un)boundedness of the clique-width of graph classes defined by two forbidden induced subgraphs H1 and H2. Prior to our study it was not known whether the number of open cases was finite. We provide a positive answer to this question. To reduce the number of open cases we determine new graph classes of bounded clique-width and new graph classes of unbounded clique-width. For obtaining the latter results we first present a new, generic construction for graph classes of unbounded clique-width. Our results settle the boundedness or unboundedness of the clique-width of the class of (H1,H2)-free graphs for all pairs (H1,H2), both of which are connected, except two non-equivalent cases, and for all pairs (H1,H2), at least one of which is not connected, except 11 non-equivalent cases. We also consider classes characterized by forbidding a finite family of graphs {H1,…,Hp} as subgraphs, minors and topological minors, respectively, and completely determine which of these classes have bounded clique-width. Finally, we show algorithmic consequences of our results for the graph colouring problem restricted to (H1,H2)-free graphs

    Recognizing Graphs Close to Bipartite Graphs with an Application to Colouring Reconfiguration

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    We continue research into a well-studied family of problems that ask whether the vertices of a given graph can be partitioned into sets A and B, where A is an independent set and B induces a graph from some specified graph class G. We consider the case where G is the class of k-degenerate graphs. This problem is known to be polynomial-time solvable if k = 0 (recognition of bipartite graphs), but NP-complete if k = 1 (near-bipartite graphs) even for graphs of maximum degree 4. Yang and Yuan [DM, 2006] showed that the k = 1 case is polynomial-time solvable for graphs of maximum degree 3. This also follows from a result of Catlin and Lai [DM, 1995]. We study the general k ≥ 1 case for n-vertex graphs of maximum degree k + 2 We show how to find A and B in O(n) time for k = 1, and in O(n 2 ) time for k ≥ 2. Together, these results provide an algorithmic version of a result of Catlin [JCTB, 1979] and also provide an algorithmic version of a generalization of Brook’s Theorem, proved by Borodin, Kostochka and Toft [DM, 2000] and Matamala [JGT, 2007]. The results also enable us to solve an open problem of Feghali et al. [JGT, 2016]. For a given graph G and positive integer `, the vertex colouring reconfiguration graph of G has as its vertex set the set of `-colourings of G and contains an edge between each pair of colourings that differ on exactly on vertex. We complete the complexity classification of the problem of finding a path in the reconfiguration graph between two given `-colourings of a given graph of maximum degree k

    Classifying the Clique-Width of H-Free Bipartite Graphs

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    Let G be a bipartite graph, and let H be a bipartite graph with a fixed bipartition (B H ,W H ). We consider three different, natural ways of forbidding H as an induced subgraph in G. First, G is H-free if it does not contain H as an induced subgraph. Second, G is strongly H-free if G is H-free or else has no bipartition (B G ,W G ) with B H  ⊆ B G and W H  ⊆ W G . Third, G is weakly H-free if G is H-free or else has at least one bipartition (B G ,W G ) with TeX or TeX. Lozin and Volz characterized all bipartite graphs H for which the class of strongly H-free bipartite graphs has bounded clique-width. We extend their result by giving complete classifications for the other two variants of H-freeness

    Colouring of Graphs with Ramsey-Type Forbidden Subgraphs

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    A colouring of a graph G = (V;E) is a mapping c : V ! f1; 2; : : :g such that c(u) 6= c(v) if uv 2 E; if jc(V )j k then c is a k-colouring. The Colouring problem is that of testing whether a given graph has a k-colouring for some given integer k. If a graph contains no induced subgraph isomorphic to any graph in some family H, then it is called H-free. The complexity of Colouring for H-free graphs with jHj = 1 has been completely classied. When jHj = 2, the classication is still wide open, although many partial results are known. We continue this line of research and forbid induced subgraphs fH1;H2g, where we allow H1 to have a single edge and H2 to have a single nonedge. Instead of showing only polynomial-time solvability, we prove that Colouring on such graphs is xed-parameter tractable when parameterized by jH1j + jH2j. As a byproduct, we obtain the same result both for the problem of determining a maximum independent set and for the problem of determining a maximum clique

    Well-quasi-ordering versus clique-width: new results on bigenic classes

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    Daligault, Rao and Thomassé conjectured that if a hereditary class of graphs is well-quasi-ordered by the induced subgraph relation then it has bounded clique-width. Lozin, Razgon and Zamaraev recently showed that this conjecture is not true for infinitely defined classes. For finitely defined classes the conjecture is still open. It is known to hold for classes of graphs defined by a single forbidden induced subgraph H, as such graphs are well-quasi-ordered and are of bounded clique-width if and only if H is an induced subgraph of P4P4. For bigenic classes of graphs i.e. ones defined by two forbidden induced subgraphs there are several open cases in both classifications. We reduce the number of open cases for well-quasi-orderability of such classes from 12 to 9. Our results agree with the conjecture and imply that there are only two remaining cases to verify for bigenic classes

    Filling the complexity gaps for colouring planar and bounded degree graphs

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    We consider a natural restriction of the List Colouring problem, k-Regular List Colouring, which corresponds to the List Colouring problem where every list has size exactly k. We give a complete classification of the complexity of k-Regular List Colouring restricted to planar graphs, planar bipartite graphs, planar triangle-free graphs and to planar graphs with no 4-cycles and no 5-cycles. We also give a complete classification of the complexity of this problem and a number of related colouring problems for graphs with bounded maximum degree
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