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5 bytes added ,  18:34, 14 August 2008
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<p>[[Image:Logical_Graph_Figure_11.jpg|center]]</p>
 
<p>[[Image:Logical_Graph_Figure_11.jpg|center]]</p>
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This portrays <math>index_0\!</math> as the address of a record that contains the data, <math>datum_1,\!</math> <math>datum_2,\!</math> <math>datum_3, \ldots,\!</math> and so on.
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This portrays <math>index_0\!</math> as the address of a record that contains the following data:
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<center><p><math>datum_1, datum_2, datum_3, \ldots,\!</math> and so on.</p></center>
    
What makes it possible to represent graph-theoretical structures as data structures in computer memory is the fact that an address is just another datum, and so we can have a circumstance like this:
 
What makes it possible to represent graph-theoretical structures as data structures in computer memory is the fact that an address is just another datum, and so we can have a circumstance like this:
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