The Delaunay triangulation of a spatial point pattern X
is defined as follows. First the Dirichlet/Voronoi tessellation
based on X is computed; see dirichlet. This
tessellation is extended to cover the entire two-dimensional plane.
Then two points of X
are defined to be Delaunay neighbours if their Dirichlet/Voronoi tiles
share a common boundary. Every pair of Delaunay neighbours is
joined by a straight line to make the Delaunay triangulation.
The graph distance
in the Delaunay triangulation between two points X[i] and X[j]
is the minimum number of edges of the Delaunay triangulation
that must be traversed to go from X[i] to X[j].
Two points have graph distance 1 if they are immediate neighbours.
This command returns a matrix D such that
D[i,j] is the graph distance
between X[i] and X[j].