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Dinitz Problem


Given any assignment of n-element sets to the n^2 locations of a square n×n array, is it always possible to find a partial Latin square? The fact that such a partial Latin square can always be found for a 2×2 array can be proven analytically, and techniques were developed which also proved the existence for 4×4 and 6×6 arrays. However, the general problem eluded solution until it was answered in the affirmative by Galvin in 1993 using results of Janssen (1993ab) and F. Maffray.


See also

Partial Latin Square

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References

Chetwynd, A. and Häggkvist, R. "A Note on List-Colorings." J. Graph Th. 13, 87-95, 1989.Cipra, B. "Quite Easily Done." In What's Happening in the Mathematical Sciences 2, pp. 41-46, 1994.Erdős, P.; Rubin, A.; and Taylor, H. "Choosability in Graphs." Congr. Numer. 26, 125-157, 1979.Häggkvist, R. "Towards a Solution of the Dinitz Problem?" Disc. Math. 75, 247-251, 1989.Janssen, J. C. M. "The Dinitz Problem Solved for Rectangles." Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 29, 243-249, 1993a.Janssen, J. C. M. Even and Odd Latin Squares. Ph.D. thesis. Lehigh University, 1993b.Kahn, J. "Recent Results on Some Not-So-Recent Hypergraph Matching and Covering Problems." Proceedings of the Conference on Extremal Problems for Finite Sets. Visegràd, Hungary, 1991.Kahn, J. "Coloring Nearly-Disjoint Hypergraphs with n+o(n) Colors." J. Combin. Th. Ser. A 59, 31-39, 1992.

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Dinitz Problem

Cite this as:

Weisstein, Eric W. "Dinitz Problem." From MathWorld--A Wolfram Web Resource. https://mathworld.wolfram.com/DinitzProblem.html

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