Combinatorics and geometry of finite and infinite squaregraphs
Hans-Jurgen Bandelt, Victor Chepoi, and David Eppstein

TL;DR
This paper explores the combinatorial and geometric properties of finite and infinite squaregraphs, their dualities, embeddings into products of trees, and algorithmic features, revealing new structural insights and computational results.
Contribution
It introduces new characterizations of squaregraphs, establishes embedding theorems into products of trees, and analyzes their algorithmic properties, extending known results to infinite cases.
Findings
Every squaregraph can be embedded into the product of five trees.
Some squaregraphs can be embedded into the product of three trees.
Median-generating sets in finite squaregraphs can be computed in polynomial time.
Abstract
Squaregraphs were originally defined as finite plane graphs in which all inner faces are quadrilaterals (i.e., 4-cycles) and all inner vertices (i.e., the vertices not incident with the outer face) have degrees larger than three. The planar dual of a finite squaregraph is determined by a triangle-free chord diagram of the unit disk, which could alternatively be viewed as a triangle-free line arrangement in the hyperbolic plane. This representation carries over to infinite plane graphs with finite vertex degrees in which the balls are finite squaregraphs. Algebraically, finite squaregraphs are median graphs for which the duals are finite circular split systems. Hence squaregraphs are at the crosspoint of two dualities, an algebraic and a geometric one, and thus lend themselves to several combinatorial interpretations and structural characterizations. With these and the 5-colorability…
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