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Extending the disjoint‐representatives theorems of Hall, Halmos, and Vaughan to list‐multicolorings of graphs
Author(s) -
Cropper M. M.,
Goldwasser J. L.,
Hilton A. J. W.,
Hoffman D. G.,
Johnson P. D.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of graph theory
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.164
H-Index - 54
eISSN - 1097-0118
pISSN - 0364-9024
DOI - 10.1002/(sici)1097-0118(200004)33:4<199::aid-jgt2>3.0.co;2-7
Subject(s) - combinatorics , mathematics , disjoint sets , vertex (graph theory) , discrete mathematics , constructive , clique , generalization , graph , computer science , mathematical analysis , process (computing) , operating system
Philip Hall's famous theorem on systems of distinct representatives and its not‐so‐famous improvement by Halmos and Vaughan (1950) can be regarded as statements about the existence of proper list‐colorings or list‐multicolorings of complete graphs. The necessary and sufficient condition for a proper “coloring” in these theorems has a rather natural generalization to a condition we call Hall's condition on a simple graph G , a vertex list assignment to G , and an assignment of nonnegative integers to the vertices of G . Hall's condition turns out to be necessary for the existence of a proper multicoloring of G under these assignments. The Hall‐Halmos‐Vaughan theorem may be stated: when G is a clique, Hall's condition is sufficient for the existence of a proper multicoloring. In this article, we undertake the study of the class HHV of simple graphs G for which Hall's condition is sufficient for the existence of a proper multicoloring. It is shown that HHV is contained in the class ℋ 0 of graphs in which every block is a clique and each cut‐vertex lies in exactly two blocks. On the other hand, besides cliques, the only connected graphs we know to be in HHV are (i) any two cliques joined at a cut‐vertex, (ii) paths, and (iii) the two connected graphs of order 5 in ℋ 0 , which are neither cliques, paths, nor two cliques stuck together. In case (ii), we address the constructive aspect, the problem of deciding if there is a proper coloring and, if there is, of finding one. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Graph Theory 33: 199–219, 2000

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