(New page: It does according to Dirac's Theorem. a,b,c,f,d,e)
 
 
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It does according to Dirac's Theorem.
 
It does according to Dirac's Theorem.
 
a,b,c,f,d,e
 
a,b,c,f,d,e
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----
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I don't necessarily agree with this.  That is a Hamilton path described above.  A circuit must get back to a, causing it to touch c and f twice. It does not pass Dirac's theorem and it does not pass ore's theorem.
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Dirac
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n=6
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degree of every vertex must be at least n/2 which is 3, and a,d,b,e fail this.
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--[[User:Podarcze|Podarcze]] 12:21, 19 November 2008 (UTC)

Latest revision as of 07:22, 19 November 2008

It does according to Dirac's Theorem. a,b,c,f,d,e


I don't necessarily agree with this. That is a Hamilton path described above. A circuit must get back to a, causing it to touch c and f twice. It does not pass Dirac's theorem and it does not pass ore's theorem.

Dirac n=6 degree of every vertex must be at least n/2 which is 3, and a,d,b,e fail this. --Podarcze 12:21, 19 November 2008 (UTC)

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