Abstract

Fix $\varepsilon>0$ and a nonnull graph $H$. A well-known theorem of Rödl from the 80s says that every graph $G$ with no induced copy of $H$ contains a linear-sized $\varepsilon$-restricted set $S\subseteq V(G)$, which means $S$ induces a subgraph with maximum degree at most $\varepsilon |S|$ in $G$ or its complement. There are two extensions of this result:
 
 quantitatively, Nikiforov (and later Fox and Sudakov) relaxed the condition "no induced copy of $H$" into "at most $\kappa|G|^{|H|}$ induced copies of $H$ for some $\kappa>0$" depending on $H$ and $\varepsilon$; and
 qualitatively, Chudnovsky, Scott, Seymour, and Spirkl recently showed that there exists $N>0$ depending on $H$ and $\varepsilon$ such that $G$ is $(N,\varepsilon)$-restricted, which means $V(G)$ has a partition into at most $N$ subsets that are $\varepsilon$-restricted.
 
 A natural common generalization of these two asserts that every graph $G$ with at most $\kappa|G|^{|H|}$ induced copies of $H$ is $(N,\varepsilon)$-restricted for some $\kappa,N>0$. This is unfortunately false, but we prove that for every $\varepsilon>0$, $\kappa$ and $N$ still exist so that for every $d\ge0$, every graph with at most $\kappa d^{\vert H\vert}$ induced copies of $H$ has an $(N,\varepsilon)$-restricted induced subgraph on at least $\vert G\vert-d$ vertices. This unifies the two aforementioned theorems, and is optimal up to$\kappa$ and $N$ for every value of $d$.

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