AbstractA general framework for coloring problems is described; the concept of regular coloring is introduced; it simply means that one specifies in each edge the maximum and the minimum number of nodes which may have the same color.For several types of regular colorings, one defines canonical colorings where colors form an ordered set and where one always tries to use first the “smallest” colors. It is shown that for some classes of multigraphs including bipartite multigraphs, regular edge colorings corresponding to maximal color feasible sequences are canonical
We consider a canonical Ramsey type problem. An edge-coloring of a graph is called m-good if each co...
Beginning with the origin of the four color problem in 1852, the field of graph colorings has develo...
AbstractWe improve the previous bounds on the so-called unordered Canonical Ramsey numbers, introduc...
AbstractA general framework for coloring problems is described; the concept of regular coloring is i...
AbstractA general type of edge colorings is described which includes many known colorings. Necessary...
The use of regular graph colouring as an equivalent simple definition for regular equivalence is ext...
A comprehensive treatment of color-induced graph colorings is presented in this book, emphasizing ve...
We study the graph coloring problem under two kinds of simultaneous restrictions. First we forbid so...
AbstractGiven a bipartite graph G, and a sequence H=(h1, h2,…, hn) of positive integers, necessary c...
A classical result from graph theory states that the edges of an l--regular bipartite graph can be c...
An (r − 1, 1)-coloring of an r-regular graph G is an edge coloring (with arbitrarily many colors) su...
This note follows an earlier suggestion by Borgatti (19891, and Everett and Borgatti (1992a). Here, ...
The classical canonical Ramsey theorem of Erdos and Rado states that, for any integer q ≥ 1, any edg...
AbstractA classical result from graph theory states that the edges of an l-regular bipartite graph c...
For a graph G and an ordering of the vertices pi, the set of canonical k-colorings of G under pi is ...
We consider a canonical Ramsey type problem. An edge-coloring of a graph is called m-good if each co...
Beginning with the origin of the four color problem in 1852, the field of graph colorings has develo...
AbstractWe improve the previous bounds on the so-called unordered Canonical Ramsey numbers, introduc...
AbstractA general framework for coloring problems is described; the concept of regular coloring is i...
AbstractA general type of edge colorings is described which includes many known colorings. Necessary...
The use of regular graph colouring as an equivalent simple definition for regular equivalence is ext...
A comprehensive treatment of color-induced graph colorings is presented in this book, emphasizing ve...
We study the graph coloring problem under two kinds of simultaneous restrictions. First we forbid so...
AbstractGiven a bipartite graph G, and a sequence H=(h1, h2,…, hn) of positive integers, necessary c...
A classical result from graph theory states that the edges of an l--regular bipartite graph can be c...
An (r − 1, 1)-coloring of an r-regular graph G is an edge coloring (with arbitrarily many colors) su...
This note follows an earlier suggestion by Borgatti (19891, and Everett and Borgatti (1992a). Here, ...
The classical canonical Ramsey theorem of Erdos and Rado states that, for any integer q ≥ 1, any edg...
AbstractA classical result from graph theory states that the edges of an l-regular bipartite graph c...
For a graph G and an ordering of the vertices pi, the set of canonical k-colorings of G under pi is ...
We consider a canonical Ramsey type problem. An edge-coloring of a graph is called m-good if each co...
Beginning with the origin of the four color problem in 1852, the field of graph colorings has develo...
AbstractWe improve the previous bounds on the so-called unordered Canonical Ramsey numbers, introduc...