Discrete Mathematics & Theoretical Computer Science (Apr 2024)

Connected greedy colourings of perfect graphs and other classes: the good, the bad and the ugly

  • Laurent Beaudou,
  • Caroline Brosse,
  • Oscar Defrain,
  • Florent Foucaud,
  • Aurélie Lagoutte,
  • Vincent Limouzy,
  • Lucas Pastor

DOI
https://doi.org/10.46298/dmtcs.8715
Journal volume & issue
Vol. vol. 25:2, no. Graph Theory

Abstract

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The Grundy number of a graph is the maximum number of colours used by the "First-Fit" greedy colouring algorithm over all vertex orderings. Given a vertex ordering $\sigma= v_1,\dots,v_n$, the "First-Fit" greedy colouring algorithm colours the vertices in the order of $\sigma$ by assigning to each vertex the smallest colour unused in its neighbourhood. By restricting this procedure to vertex orderings that are connected, we obtain {\em connected greedy colourings}. For some graphs, all connected greedy colourings use exactly $\chi(G)$ colours; they are called {\em good graphs}. On the opposite, some graphs do not admit any connected greedy colouring using only $\chi(G)$ colours; they are called {\em ugly graphs}. We show that no perfect graph is ugly. We also give simple proofs of this fact for subclasses of perfect graphs (block graphs, comparability graphs), and show that no $K_4$-minor free graph is ugly. Moreover, our proofs are constructive, and imply the existence of polynomial-time algorithms to compute good connected orderings for these graph classes.

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