Warning
This documents an unmaintained version of NetworkX. Please upgrade to a maintained version and see the current NetworkX documentation.
draw¶
-
draw
(G, pos=None, ax=None, hold=None, **kwds)[source]¶ Draw the graph G with Matplotlib.
Draw the graph as a simple representation with no node labels or edge labels and using the full Matplotlib figure area and no axis labels by default. See draw_networkx() for more full-featured drawing that allows title, axis labels etc.
Parameters: - G (graph) – A networkx graph
- pos (dictionary, optional) – A dictionary with nodes as keys and positions as values. If not specified a spring layout positioning will be computed. See networkx.layout for functions that compute node positions.
- ax (Matplotlib Axes object, optional) – Draw the graph in specified Matplotlib axes.
- hold (bool, optional) – Set the Matplotlib hold state. If True subsequent draw commands will be added to the current axes.
- **kwds –
See networkx.draw_networkx() for a description of optional keywords.
Examples
>>> G=nx.dodecahedral_graph() >>> nx.draw(G) >>> nx.draw(G,pos=nx.spring_layout(G)) # use spring layout
See also
draw_networkx()
,draw_networkx_nodes()
,draw_networkx_edges()
,draw_networkx_labels()
,draw_networkx_edge_labels()
Notes
This function has the same name as pylab.draw and pyplot.draw so beware when using
>>> from networkx import *
since you might overwrite the pylab.draw function.
With pyplot use
>>> import matplotlib.pyplot as plt >>> import networkx as nx >>> G=nx.dodecahedral_graph() >>> nx.draw(G) # networkx draw() >>> plt.draw() # pyplot draw()
Also see the NetworkX drawing examples at https://networkx.org/documentation/latest/gallery.html