A geographic network is a graph whose vertices are restricted to lie in a prescribed region in the plane. In this paper we begin to study the following fundamental problem for geographic networks: can a given geographic network be drawn without crossings? We focus on the seemingly simple setting where each region is a vertical segment, and one wants to connect pairs of segments with a path that lies inside the convex hull of the two segments. We prove that when paths must be drawn as straight line segments, it is NP-complete to determine if a crossing-free solution exists, even if all vertical segments have unit length. In contrast, we show that when paths must be monotone curves, the question can be answered in polynomial time. In the more...
Let P be a set of n vertices in the plane and S a set of noncrossing line segments between vertices ...
Abstract. We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar su...
AbstractWe study the problem of computing hierarchical drawings of layered graphs when some pairs of...
A geographic network is a graph whose vertices are restricted to lie in a prescribed region in the p...
A geographic network is a graph whose vertices are restricted to lie in a prescribed region in the p...
In this paper we concentrate on an unexplored graph drawing problem: the one arising when each verte...
We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar subgraph S o...
International audienceA transition in a graph is a pair of adjacent edges. Given a graph G = (V, E),...
AbstractThe problem of drawing a graph with prescribed edge lengths such that edges do not cross is ...
We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar subgraph S o...
We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar subgraph S o...
We study some geographic and geometric graphs namely road networks and clustered graphs from topolog...
Routing is an important problem in networks. We look at routing in the presence of line segment cons...
Let P and Q be finite point sets of the same cardinality in R 2 , each labelled from 1 to n. Two non...
Let P be a set of n vertices in the plane and S a set of noncrossing line segments between vertices ...
Abstract. We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar su...
AbstractWe study the problem of computing hierarchical drawings of layered graphs when some pairs of...
A geographic network is a graph whose vertices are restricted to lie in a prescribed region in the p...
A geographic network is a graph whose vertices are restricted to lie in a prescribed region in the p...
In this paper we concentrate on an unexplored graph drawing problem: the one arising when each verte...
We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar subgraph S o...
International audienceA transition in a graph is a pair of adjacent edges. Given a graph G = (V, E),...
AbstractThe problem of drawing a graph with prescribed edge lengths such that edges do not cross is ...
We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar subgraph S o...
We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar subgraph S o...
We study some geographic and geometric graphs namely road networks and clustered graphs from topolog...
Routing is an important problem in networks. We look at routing in the presence of line segment cons...
Let P and Q be finite point sets of the same cardinality in R 2 , each labelled from 1 to n. Two non...
Let P be a set of n vertices in the plane and S a set of noncrossing line segments between vertices ...
Abstract. We initiate the study of the following problem: Given a non-planar graph G and a planar su...
AbstractWe study the problem of computing hierarchical drawings of layered graphs when some pairs of...