From the point of view of graph theory, vertices are treated as featureless and indivisible objects, although they may have additional structure depending on the application from which the graph arises;for instance, a semantic network is a graph in which the vertices represent concepts or classes of objects. More...
#include "../Config.h"
#include "../Enums.h"
#include <map>
#include <string>
#include <set>
#include <vector>
Go to the source code of this file.
Classes | |
class | te::graph::Vertex |
From the point of view of graph theory, vertices are treated as featureless and indivisible objects, although they may have additional structure depending on the application from which the graph arises;for instance, a semantic network is a graph in which the vertices represent concepts or classes of objects. More... | |
Namespaces | |
te | |
TerraLib. | |
te::dt | |
Namespace for the Data Type module of TerraLib. | |
te::graph | |
From the point of view of graph theory, vertices are treated as featureless and indivisible objects, although they may have additional structure depending on the application from which the graph arises;for instance, a semantic network is a graph in which the vertices represent concepts or classes of objects.
Definition in file Vertex.h.