I have this graph. The SCCs in this Graph are {a, b, e}, {d, g}, and {c, d, h}. But the cycles in this graph are the same components, right?
So what exactly is the difference between SCCs and directed cycles? Do they only differ in specific cases?
I have this graph. The SCCs in this Graph are {a, b, e}, {d, g}, and {c, d, h}. But the cycles in this graph are the same components, right?
So what exactly is the difference between SCCs and directed cycles? Do they only differ in specific cases?
In a directed graph G(V,E):
w is reachable from a vertex v if there exists a directed path from v to w.v and w in G there is a directed path from v to w and a directed path from w to v.v and w in the strongly connected sub-graph G'(V',E') where V' ⊂ V and E' ⊂ E there is a directed path from v to w and a directed path from w to v.The difference is that:
If you have the strongly connected component:
A → B
↓ ↖ ↓
C → D
Then there is a directed path C → D → A → B and a directed path B → D → A → C but there is no directed cycle that contains both B and C as the edge D → A would have to be visited twice in the cycle.
Additionally, there is another (technical) difference that if the directed cycle visits all the vertices then it is a strongly connected directed graph and not a strongly connected component (as a component is a strict sub-graph).