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parse_edgelist¶
- parse_edgelist(lines, comments='#', delimiter=None, create_using=None, nodetype=None, data=True)[source]¶
Parse lines of an edge list representation of a graph.
Parameters : lines : list or iterator of strings
Input data in edgelist format
comments : string, optional
Marker for comment lines
delimiter : string, optional
Separator for node labels
create_using: NetworkX graph container, optional
Use given NetworkX graph for holding nodes or edges.
nodetype : Python type, optional
Convert nodes to this type.
data : bool or list of (label,type) tuples
If False generate no edge data or if True use a dictionary representation of edge data or a list tuples specifying dictionary key names and types for edge data.
Returns : G: NetworkX Graph
The graph corresponding to lines
See also
Examples
Edgelist with no data:
>>> lines = ["1 2", ... "2 3", ... "3 4"] >>> G = nx.parse_edgelist(lines, nodetype = int) >>> G.nodes() [1, 2, 3, 4] >>> G.edges() [(1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4)]
Edgelist with data in Python dictionary representation:
>>> lines = ["1 2 {'weight':3}", ... "2 3 {'weight':27}", ... "3 4 {'weight':3.0}"] >>> G = nx.parse_edgelist(lines, nodetype = int) >>> G.nodes() [1, 2, 3, 4] >>> G.edges(data = True) [(1, 2, {'weight': 3}), (2, 3, {'weight': 27}), (3, 4, {'weight': 3.0})]
Edgelist with data in a list:
>>> lines = ["1 2 3", ... "2 3 27", ... "3 4 3.0"] >>> G = nx.parse_edgelist(lines, nodetype = int, data=(('weight',float),)) >>> G.nodes() [1, 2, 3, 4] >>> G.edges(data = True) [(1, 2, {'weight': 3.0}), (2, 3, {'weight': 27.0}), (3, 4, {'weight': 3.0})]