Fáry's theorem

In the mathematical field of graph theory, Fáry's theorem states that any simple, planar graph can be drawn without crossings so that its edges are straight line segments. That is, the ability to draw graph edges as curves instead of as straight line segments does not allow a larger class of graphs to be drawn.

Source: Wikipedia — Fáry's theorem (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Fáry's theorem

In the mathematical field of graph theory, Fáry's theorem states that any simple, planar graph can be drawn without crossings so that its edges are straight line segments. That is, the ability to draw graph edges as curves instead of as straight line segments does not allow a larger class of graphs to be drawn.

Source: Wikipedia "Fáry's theorem" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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