English

Area-Universal Rectangular Layouts

Computational Geometry 2009-01-27 v1

Abstract

A rectangular layout is a partition of a rectangle into a finite set of interior-disjoint rectangles. Rectangular layouts appear in various applications: as rectangular cartograms in cartography, as floorplans in building architecture and VLSI design, and as graph drawings. Often areas are associated with the rectangles of a rectangular layout and it might hence be desirable if one rectangular layout can represent several area assignments. A layout is area-universal if any assignment of areas to rectangles can be realized by a combinatorially equivalent rectangular layout. We identify a simple necessary and sufficient condition for a rectangular layout to be area-universal: a rectangular layout is area-universal if and only if it is one-sided. More generally, given any rectangular layout L and any assignment of areas to its regions, we show that there can be at most one layout (up to horizontal and vertical scaling) which is combinatorially equivalent to L and achieves a given area assignment. We also investigate similar questions for perimeter assignments. The adjacency requirements for the rectangles of a rectangular layout can be specified in various ways, most commonly via the dual graph of the layout. We show how to find an area-universal layout for a given set of adjacency requirements whenever such a layout exists.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0901.3924,
  title  = {Area-Universal Rectangular Layouts},
  author = {David Eppstein and Elena Mumford and Bettina Speckmann and Kevin Verbeek},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0901.3924},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

19 pages, 16 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-21T12:04:30.042Z