Therese Biedl

2papers

2 Papers

6.7DSMar 14
Face-hitting dominating sets in planar graphs: Alternative proof and linear-time algorithm

Therese Biedl

In a recent paper, Francis, Illickan, Jose and Rajendraprasad showed that every $n$-vertex plane graph $G$ has (under some natural restrictions) a vertex-partition into two sets $V_1$ and $V_2$ such that each $V_i$ is \emph{dominating} (every vertex of $G$ contains a vertex of $V_i$ in its closed neighbourhood) and \emph{face-hitting} (every face of $G$ is incident to a vertex of $V_i$). Their proof works by considering a supergraph $G'$ of $G$ that has certain properties, and among all such graphs, taking one that has the fewest edges. As such, their proof is not algorithmic. Their proof also relies on the 4-color theorem, for which a quadratic-time algorithm exists, but it would not be easy to implement. In this paper, we give a new proof that every $n$-vertex plane graph $G$ has (under the same restrictions) a vertex-partition into two dominating face-hitting sets. Our proof is constructive, and requires nothing more complicated than splitting a graph into 2-connected components, finding an ear decomposition, and computing a perfect matching in a 3-regular plane graph. For all these problems, linear-time algorithms are known and so we can find the vertex-partition in linear time.

DMMar 3, 2015
DAG-width of Control Flow Graphs with Applications to Model Checking

Therese Biedl, Sebastian Fischmeister, Neeraj Kumar

The treewidth of control flow graphs arising from structured programs is known to be at most six. However, as a control flow graph is inherently directed, it makes sense to consider a measure of width for digraphs instead. We use the so-called DAG-width and show that the DAG-width of control flow graphs arising from structured (goto-free) programs is at most three. Additionally, we also give a linear time algorithm to compute the DAG decomposition of these control flow graphs. One consequence of this result is that parity games (and hence the $μ$-calculus model checking problem), which are known to be tractable on graphs of bounded DAG-width, can be solved efficiently in practice on control flow graphs.