Planar Confluent Orthogonal Drawings of 4-Modal Digraphs

08/29/2022
by   Sabine Cornelsen, et al.
0

In a planar confluent orthogonal drawing (PCOD) of a directed graph (digraph) vertices are drawn as points in the plane and edges as orthogonal polylines starting with a vertical segment and ending with a horizontal segment. Edges may overlap in their first or last segment, but must not intersect otherwise. PCODs can be seen as a directed variant of Kandinsky drawings or as planar L-drawings of subdivisions of digraphs. The maximum number of subdivision vertices in an edge is then the split complexity. A PCOD is upward if each edge is drawn with monotonically increasing y-coordinates and quasi-upward if no edge starts with decreasing y-coordinates. We study the split complexity of PCODs and (quasi-)upward PCODs for various classes of graphs.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
08/18/2020

Planar L-Drawings of Bimodal Graphs

In a planar L-drawing of a directed graph (digraph) each edge e is repre...
research
10/25/2019

Optimal Orthogonal Drawings of Planar 3-Graphs in Linear Time

A planar orthogonal drawing Γ of a planar graph G is a geometric represe...
research
08/30/2018

Orthogonal and Smooth Orthogonal Layouts of 1-Planar Graphs with Low Edge Complexity

While orthogonal drawings have a long history, smooth orthogonal drawing...
research
08/24/2021

Quasi-upward Planar Drawings with Minimum Curve Complexity

This paper studies the problem of computing quasi-upward planar drawings...
research
01/08/2018

Optimal Morphs of Planar Orthogonal Drawings

We describe an algorithm that morphs between two planar orthogonal drawi...
research
08/24/2017

Ordered Level Planarity, Geodesic Planarity and Bi-Monotonicity

We introduce and study the problem Ordered Level Planarity which asks fo...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset