# Graph Theory - Graph with degree at most 3

I've got a graph theory/combinatorics question that I'm really struggling with, and would appreciate some help. The question says:

Suppose G is a graph such that every vertex has degree at most 3, and the shortest path between any two vertices has length at most 2. Show tgat G has at most 10 vertices, and construct such a graph with 10 vertices.

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Fix any node $x\in G$. How many nodes can be connected to $x$? So how many distinct nodes can be one or two edges away? –  Thomas Andrews Nov 7 '12 at 14:49
The Peterson graph is such a 10 vertex graph. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… –  Angela Richardson Nov 7 '12 at 14:57

Let V be the set of verticies of G. Let u be the vertex of maximum degree,Let A be the set of neighbours of u and Let B be the set of all neighbours of neighbours of u except u. since the distance between any 2 verticies is at most 2 therefore V-{u} is a subset of A U B. Since the maximum degree is <= 3 therefore $|A|<=3$ by a similar argument we knw that the number of neighbours(different from u) of neighbours of u is at most 2. Therefore |B| <= 2|A| threfore |V-{u}| <=|A U B| <= |A|+|B| <= 3|A| <= 9 therefore |V| <= 10
I follow the ideas of Thomas Andrews. Suppose that $v$ is some vertex and consider the Breadth-First-Search tree rooted at $v$. In this tree $v$ has at most $3$ childrean $v_1,v_2,v_3$, and each of the $v_i$ has at most $2$ childrean. There are no deeper nodes in this tree due to the disance requirement. Hence you have $1$ node in the first level, $3$ nodes in the second level and $3*2=6$ nodes in the third level of the BFS tree. In total $1+3+6=10$ nodes.