Digraphs: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "A '''digraph''' is a directed graph; a graph in which the edges have a direction. This is usually indicated with an arrow on the edge. The formal definition is: If v and w...")
 
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This is usually indicated with an arrow on the edge.
This is usually indicated with an arrow on the edge.
A Digraph portrays a [[Contextual Relation]] among the elementsof the system and can be converted into an [[Interpretive Structural Model of the system with respect to that relation.


The formal definition is:
The formal definition is:
If v and w are vertices, an edge is an unordered pair {v,w}, while a directed edge, called an arc, is an ordered pair (v,w) or (w,v).
If v and w are vertices, an edge is an unordered pair {v,w}, while a directed edge, called an arc, is an ordered pair (v,w) or (w,v).
[[Category: ISM Terminology]]

Latest revision as of 11:28, 10 January 2022

A digraph is a directed graph; a graph in which the edges have a direction.

This is usually indicated with an arrow on the edge.

A Digraph portrays a Contextual Relation among the elementsof the system and can be converted into an [[Interpretive Structural Model of the system with respect to that relation.

The formal definition is: If v and w are vertices, an edge is an unordered pair {v,w}, while a directed edge, called an arc, is an ordered pair (v,w) or (w,v).