A graph H is common if the limit as nββ of the minimum density of
monochromatic labelled copies of H in an edge colouring of Knβ with red and
blue is attained by a sequence of quasirandom colourings. We apply an
information-theoretic approach to show that certain graphs obtained from odd
cycles and paths via gluing operations are common. In fact, for every pair
(H1β,H2β) of such graphs, there exists pβ(0,1) such that an appropriate
linear combination of red copies of H1β and blue copies of H2β is minimized
by a quasirandom colouring in which p(2nβ) edges are red; such a pair
(H1β,H2β) is said to be (p,1βp)-common. Our approach exploits a
strengthening of the common graph property for odd cycles that was recently
proved using Schur convexity. We also exhibit a (p,1βp)-common pair
(H1β,H2β) such that H2β is uncommon.Comment: 29 pages. Several results and open problems which appear here
appeared in early arXiv versions of the paper 'Common Pairs of Graphs'
arXiv:2208.02045 which was later split into two papers, of which this is the
secon