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[[Complete-linkage clustering|Complete-linkage]] or furthest-neighbor clustering is a form of agglomerative clustering that defines the dissimilarity between clusters to be the maximum distance between any two points from the two clusters. Similarly, average-distance clustering uses the average pairwise distance as the dissimilarity. Like Ward's distance, these two forms of clustering obey a formula of Lance-Williams type. In complete linkage, the distance <math>d(A\cup B,C)</math> is the maximum of the two distances <math>d(A,C)</math> and <math>d(B,C)</math>. Therefore, it is at least equal to the minimum of these two distances, the requirement for being reducible. For average distance, <math>d(A\cup B,C)</math> is just a weighted average of the distances <math>d(A,C)</math> and <math>d(B,C)</math>. Again, this is at least as large as the minimum of the two distances. Thus, in both of these cases, the distance is reducible.<ref name="mirkin"/><ref name="lance-williams"/>
Unlike Ward's method, these two forms of clustering do not have a constant-time method for computing distances between pairs of clusters. Instead it is possible to maintain an array of distances between all pairs of clusters
The same {{math|''O''(''n''<sup>2</sup>)}} time and space bounds can also be achieved in a different way,
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