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Now streamlined from previous editions, a new author team brings in
a fresh look to this classic textbook and at how graph theory
courses have evolved. When the first edition of this precursor text
was published, there were few undergraduate courses offered. The
text assisted in the establishment of the undergraduate course,
while also offering enough coverage for a graduate course. Graph
theory is not a seminal course in all combinatorics programs taught
in universities and colleges throughout the world. This text has
remained among the top three best-sellers. The book is famous for
the quality of the writing and presentation. We have two
best-sellers for his course, including Gross, etal.'s Graph Theory
and Its Applications. This one-two punch in this course means we
can go against any and all texts and compete successfully.
Now streamlined from previous editions, a new author team brings in
a fresh look to this classic textbook and at how graph theory
courses have evolved. When the first edition of this precursor text
was published, there were few undergraduate courses offered. The
text assisted in the establishment of the undergraduate course,
while also offering enough coverage for a graduate course. Graph
theory is not a seminal course in all combinatorics programs taught
in universities and colleges throughout the world. This text has
remained among the top three best-sellers. The book is famous for
the quality of the writing and presentation. We have two
best-sellers for his course, including Gross, etal.'s Graph Theory
and Its Applications. This one-two punch in this course means we
can go against any and all texts and compete successfully.
The study of permutation patterns is a thriving area of
combinatorics that relates to many other areas of mathematics,
including graph theory, enumerative combinatorics, model theory,
the theory of automata and languages, and bioinformatics. Arising
from the Fifth International Conference on Permutation Patterns,
held in St Andrews in June 2007, this volume contains a mixture of
survey and research articles by leading experts, and includes the
two invited speakers, Martin Klazar and Mike Atkinson. Together,
the collected articles cover all the significant strands of current
research: structural methods and simple patterns, generalisations
of patterns, various enumerative aspects, machines and networks,
packing, and more. Specialists in this area and other researchers
in combinatorics and related fields will find much of interest in
this book. In addition, the volume provides plenty of material
accessible to advanced undergraduates and is a suitable reference
for projects and dissertations.
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