An incidence structure consists of a set of points, a set of lines, and an incidence relation, or set of flags, ; a point is said to be incident with a line if . It is a (finite) partial geometry if there are integers such that:
For any pair of distinct points and , there is at most one line incident with both of them.
Each line is incident with points.
Each point is incident with lines.
If a point and a line are not incident, there are exactly pairs , such that is incident with and is incident with .
A partial geometry with these parameters is denoted by .
Properties
The number of points is given by and the number of lines by .
If a point and a line are not incident, there are either or exactly pairs , such that is incident with and is incident with .
Every pair of non-collinear points have exactly common neighbours.
A semipartial geometry is a partial geometry if and only if .
It can be easily shown that the collinearity graph of such a geometry is strongly regular with parameters
.
A nice example of such a geometry is obtained by taking the affine points of and only those lines that intersect the plane at infinity in a point of a fixed Baer subplane; it has parameters .