Partitioning a Graph into Disjoint Cliques and a Triangle-free Graph
arXiv:1403.5961
Abstract
A graph $G = (V, E)$ is \emph{partitionable} if there exists a partition $\{A, B\}$ of $V$ such that $A$ induces a disjoint union of cliques and $B$ induces a triangle-free graph. In this paper we investigate the computational complexity of deciding whether a graph is partitionable. The problem is known to be $\NP$-complete on arbitrary graphs. Here it is proved that if a graph $G$ is bull-free, planar, perfect, $K_4$-free or does not contain certain holes then deciding whether $G$ is partitionable is $\NP$-complete. This answers an open question posed by Thomass{é}, Trotignon and VuÅ¡kovi{Ä}. In contrast a finite list of forbidden induced subgraphs is given for partitionable cographs.
20 pages