A complete bipartite graph may be drawn in different ways, such that the number of line crossings differs between drawings.
To date, the question of how to draw the graph so as to minimize the number of crossings remains unsolved.
Nevertheless, an upper bound can be calculated for the number of crossings, based on the number of elements in each of the two sets comprising the graph's vertices.
Given the number of elements in each set, m and n, calculate the upper bound, b, for the minimum number of line crossings in the resulting complete bipartite graph.
Example:
m = 3;
n = 4;
b = 2
Solution Stats
Solution Comments
Show comments
Loading...
Problem Recent Solvers9
Suggested Problems
-
4505 Solvers
-
Project Euler: Problem 5, Smallest multiple
1673 Solvers
-
Back to basics 4 - Search Path
383 Solvers
-
Compute a dot product of two vectors x and y
1054 Solvers
-
204 Solvers
More from this Author45
Problem Tags
Community Treasure Hunt
Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!
Start Hunting!