Four-Color Theorem

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Four-Color Theorem Explained

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Description

 

A detailed tutorial on the four-color theorem. Step by step tutorial including several examples of the four-color theorem for reference.

 

Overview

 

The four-color theorem is a concept in math that states that given any seperation of a plane into seperate regions, the regions can be colored in using at the most four colors so that no two adjacent regions have the same color. These planes are called maps, and in fact a real map is an example of one. In order for two regions to be adjacent, they must share a side. If they share a point they are not considered adjacent.


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