A graph is bridged if it contains no isometric cycles of length greater than three. Anstee and Farber established that bridged graphs are cop-win graphs. According to Nowakowski and Winkler and Quilliot, a graph is a cop-win graph if and only if its vertices admit a linear ordering v1, v2, ..., vn such that every vertex vi i > 1, is dominated by some neighbour vj, j < i, i.e., every vertex vk, k < i, adjacent to vi is adjacent to vj, too. We present an alternative proof of the result of Anstee and Farber, which allows us to find such an ordering in time linear in the number of edges. Namely, we show that every ordering of the vertices of a bridged graph produced by the breadth-first search is a "cop-win ordering." © 1997 Academic Press.
CITATION STYLE
Chepoi, V. (1997). Bridged graphs are cop-win graphs: An algorithmic proof. Journal of Combinatorial Theory. Series B, 69(1), 97–100. https://doi.org/10.1006/jctb.1996.1726
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.