Extending Simple Drawings
Abstract
Simple drawings of graphs are those in which each pair of edges share at most one point, either a common endpoint or a proper crossing. In this paper we study the problem of extending a simple drawing of a graph by inserting a set of edges from the complement of into such that the result is a simple drawing. In the context of rectilinear drawings, the problem is trivial. For pseudolinear drawings, the existence of such an extension follows from Levi's enlargement lemma. In contrast, we prove that deciding if a given set of edges can be inserted into a simple drawing is NP-complete. Moreover, we show that the maximization version of the problem is APX-hard. We also present a polynomial-time algorithm for deciding whether one edge can be inserted into when is a dominating set for the graph .
Cite
@article{arxiv.1908.08129,
title = {Extending Simple Drawings},
author = {Alan Arroyo and Martin Derka and Irene Parada},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.08129},
year = {2019}
}
Comments
Appears in the Proceedings of the 27th International Symposium on Graph Drawing and Network Visualization (GD 2019)