Graphs and NetworksHandshakes and Dating
You have been invited to a wonderful birthday party with your friends. Including yourself and the host, there are 
In the evening, as the guests get ready to leave, everyone shakes hands with everyone else. How many handshakes are there in total?
We can represent the handshakes using a graph: every person is 
Now it is easy to count the number of edges in the graph. We find that with ${hnd} people, there are ${hnd*(hnd-1)/2} handshakes.

Rather than counting all the edges in large graphs, we could also try to find a simple formula that tells us the result for any number of guests.
Each of the 
Unfortunately this answer is not quite right. Notice how 
In fact, we have counted every handshake 
The handshake graphs are special because every vertex is connected to every other vertex. Graphs with this property are called complete graphs. The complete graph with 4 vertices is often abbreviated as 
We have just shown that a complete graph with 

On a different day, you are invited to a speed dating event for 
In this case, the corresponding graph consists of two separate sets of vertices. Every vertex is connected to all the vertices in 
 The bipartite graph with two sets of size x and y is often written as 
 English
English عربى
عربى 中文
中文 Deutsch
Deutsch Español
Español Français
Français हिन्दी
हिन्दी Hrvatski
Hrvatski Italiano
Italiano 日本語
日本語 Português
Português Română
Română Русский
Русский Svenska
Svenska Türkçe
Türkçe Tiếng Việt
Tiếng Việt