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Introduction to Graph A graph consists of a set of vertices, and a set of edges that link together the vertices. A graph can be: Directed: Edges are directed. Undirected: Edges are undirected Data Structure and Algorithm
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Undirected Graph A graph G = (V, E) V: vertices
E : edges, unordered pairs of vertices from V V (u,v) is same as (v,u) Thus |E| <= |V| (|V|-1)/2 A O N M L K J E F G H D C B I P Data Structure and Algorithm
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Directed Graph A graph G = (V, E) V: vertices
E : edges, ordered pairs of vertices from VV (u,v) is different from (v,u) Thus |E| <= |V| (|V|-1) A E F G H D C B I Data Structure and Algorithm
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Graph in Application Internet: web graphs Each page is a vertex
Each edge represent a hyperlink Directed GPS: highway maps Each city is a vertex Each freeway segment is an undirected edge Undirected Data Structure and Algorithm
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Using Adjacency Matrix Using Adjacency List
Representing Graphs Using Adjacency Matrix Using Adjacency List Data Structure and Algorithm
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Adjacency Matrix Representation
Example: A 1 2 3 4 1 2 4 3 a d b c An adjacency matrix represents the graph as a n x n matrix A: A[i, j] = 1 if edge (i, j) E (or weight of edge) = 0 if edge (i, j) E Space Complexity: O(V2) Data Structure and Algorithm
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Adjacency List Representation
1 2 3 4 2 3 1 2 4 3 a d b c 3 3 Space Complexity: O(V+E) Data Structure and Algorithm
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