# Copyright (C) 2004-2018 by
# Aric Hagberg <hagberg@lanl.gov>
# Dan Schult <dschult@colgate.edu>
# Pieter Swart <swart@lanl.gov>
# All rights reserved.
# BSD license.
#
# Authors: Aric Hagberg <hagberg@lanl.gov>
# Dan Schult <dschult@colgate.edu>
# Pieter Swart <swart@lanl.gov>
"""Base class for MultiGraph."""
from copy import deepcopy
import networkx as nx
from networkx.classes.graph import Graph
from networkx.classes.coreviews import MultiAdjacencyView
from networkx.classes.reportviews import MultiEdgeView, MultiDegreeView
from networkx import NetworkXError
from networkx.utils import iterable
[docs]class MultiGraph(Graph):
"""
An undirected graph class that can store multiedges.
Multiedges are multiple edges between two nodes. Each edge
can hold optional data or attributes.
A MultiGraph holds undirected edges. Self loops are allowed.
Nodes can be arbitrary (hashable) Python objects with optional
key/value attributes. By convention `None` is not used as a node.
Edges are represented as links between nodes with optional
key/value attributes.
Parameters
----------
incoming_graph_data : input graph (optional, default: None)
Data to initialize graph. If None (default) an empty
graph is created. The data can be any format that is supported
by the to_networkx_graph() function, currently including edge list,
dict of dicts, dict of lists, NetworkX graph, NumPy matrix
or 2d ndarray, SciPy sparse matrix, or PyGraphviz graph.
attr : keyword arguments, optional (default= no attributes)
Attributes to add to graph as key=value pairs.
See Also
--------
Graph
DiGraph
MultiDiGraph
OrderedMultiGraph
Examples
--------
Create an empty graph structure (a "null graph") with no nodes and
no edges.
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph()
G can be grown in several ways.
**Nodes:**
Add one node at a time:
>>> G.add_node(1)
Add the nodes from any container (a list, dict, set or
even the lines from a file or the nodes from another graph).
>>> G.add_nodes_from([2, 3])
>>> G.add_nodes_from(range(100, 110))
>>> H = nx.path_graph(10)
>>> G.add_nodes_from(H)
In addition to strings and integers any hashable Python object
(except None) can represent a node, e.g. a customized node object,
or even another Graph.
>>> G.add_node(H)
**Edges:**
G can also be grown by adding edges.
Add one edge,
>>> key = G.add_edge(1, 2)
a list of edges,
>>> keys = G.add_edges_from([(1, 2), (1, 3)])
or a collection of edges,
>>> keys = G.add_edges_from(H.edges)
If some edges connect nodes not yet in the graph, the nodes
are added automatically. If an edge already exists, an additional
edge is created and stored using a key to identify the edge.
By default the key is the lowest unused integer.
>>> keys = G.add_edges_from([(4,5,{'route':28}), (4,5,{'route':37})])
>>> G[4]
AdjacencyView({3: {0: {}}, 5: {0: {}, 1: {'route': 28}, 2: {'route': 37}}})
**Attributes:**
Each graph, node, and edge can hold key/value attribute pairs
in an associated attribute dictionary (the keys must be hashable).
By default these are empty, but can be added or changed using
add_edge, add_node or direct manipulation of the attribute
dictionaries named graph, node and edge respectively.
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph(day="Friday")
>>> G.graph
{'day': 'Friday'}
Add node attributes using add_node(), add_nodes_from() or G.nodes
>>> G.add_node(1, time='5pm')
>>> G.add_nodes_from([3], time='2pm')
>>> G.nodes[1]
{'time': '5pm'}
>>> G.nodes[1]['room'] = 714
>>> del G.nodes[1]['room'] # remove attribute
>>> list(G.nodes(data=True))
[(1, {'time': '5pm'}), (3, {'time': '2pm'})]
Add edge attributes using add_edge(), add_edges_from(), subscript
notation, or G.edges.
>>> key = G.add_edge(1, 2, weight=4.7 )
>>> keys = G.add_edges_from([(3, 4), (4, 5)], color='red')
>>> keys = G.add_edges_from([(1,2,{'color':'blue'}), (2,3,{'weight':8})])
>>> G[1][2][0]['weight'] = 4.7
>>> G.edges[1, 2, 0]['weight'] = 4
Warning: we protect the graph data structure by making `G.edges[1, 2]` a
read-only dict-like structure. However, you can assign to attributes
in e.g. `G.edges[1, 2]`. Thus, use 2 sets of brackets to add/change
data attributes: `G.edges[1, 2]['weight'] = 4`
(For multigraphs: `MG.edges[u, v, key][name] = value`).
**Shortcuts:**
Many common graph features allow python syntax to speed reporting.
>>> 1 in G # check if node in graph
True
>>> [n for n in G if n<3] # iterate through nodes
[1, 2]
>>> len(G) # number of nodes in graph
5
>>> G[1] # adjacency dict-like view keyed by neighbor to edge attributes
AdjacencyView({2: {0: {'weight': 4}, 1: {'color': 'blue'}}})
Often the best way to traverse all edges of a graph is via the neighbors.
The neighbors are reported as an adjacency-dict `G.adj` or as `G.adjacency()`.
>>> for n, nbrsdict in G.adjacency():
... for nbr, keydict in nbrsdict.items():
... for key, eattr in keydict.items():
... if 'weight' in eattr:
... # Do something useful with the edges
... pass
But the edges() method is often more convenient:
>>> for u, v, keys, weight in G.edges(data='weight', keys=True):
... if weight is not None:
... # Do something useful with the edges
... pass
**Reporting:**
Simple graph information is obtained using methods and object-attributes.
Reporting usually provides views instead of containers to reduce memory
usage. The views update as the graph is updated similarly to dict-views.
The objects `nodes, `edges` and `adj` provide access to data attributes
via lookup (e.g. `nodes[n], `edges[u, v]`, `adj[u][v]`) and iteration
(e.g. `nodes.items()`, `nodes.data('color')`,
`nodes.data('color', default='blue')` and similarly for `edges`)
Views exist for `nodes`, `edges`, `neighbors()`/`adj` and `degree`.
For details on these and other miscellaneous methods, see below.
**Subclasses (Advanced):**
The MultiGraph class uses a dict-of-dict-of-dict-of-dict data structure.
The outer dict (node_dict) holds adjacency information keyed by node.
The next dict (adjlist_dict) represents the adjacency information and holds
edge_key dicts keyed by neighbor. The edge_key dict holds each edge_attr
dict keyed by edge key. The inner dict (edge_attr_dict) represents
the edge data and holds edge attribute values keyed by attribute names.
Each of these four dicts in the dict-of-dict-of-dict-of-dict
structure can be replaced by a user defined dict-like object.
In general, the dict-like features should be maintained but
extra features can be added. To replace one of the dicts create
a new graph class by changing the class(!) variable holding the
factory for that dict-like structure. The variable names are
node_dict_factory, adjlist_inner_dict_factory, adjlist_outer_dict_factory,
and edge_attr_dict_factory.
node_dict_factory : function, (default: dict)
Factory function to be used to create the dict containing node
attributes, keyed by node id.
It should require no arguments and return a dict-like object
adjlist_outer_dict_factory : function, (default: dict)
Factory function to be used to create the outer-most dict
in the data structure that holds adjacency info keyed by node.
It should require no arguments and return a dict-like object.
adjlist_inner_dict_factory : function, (default: dict)
Factory function to be used to create the adjacency list
dict which holds multiedge key dicts keyed by neighbor.
It should require no arguments and return a dict-like object.
edge_key_dict_factory : function, (default: dict)
Factory function to be used to create the edge key dict
which holds edge data keyed by edge key.
It should require no arguments and return a dict-like object.
edge_attr_dict_factory : function, (default: dict)
Factory function to be used to create the edge attribute
dict which holds attrbute values keyed by attribute name.
It should require no arguments and return a dict-like object.
Examples
--------
Please see :mod:`~networkx.classes.ordered` for examples of
creating graph subclasses by overwriting the base class `dict` with
a dictionary-like object.
"""
# node_dict_factory = dict # already assigned in Graph
# adjlist_outer_dict_factory = dict
# adjlist_inner_dict_factory = dict
edge_key_dict_factory = dict
# edge_attr_dict_factory = dict
[docs] def __init__(self, incoming_graph_data=None, **attr):
"""Initialize a graph with edges, name, or graph attributes.
Parameters
----------
incoming_graph_data : input graph
Data to initialize graph. If incoming_graph_data=None (default)
an empty graph is created. The data can be an edge list, or any
NetworkX graph object. If the corresponding optional Python
packages are installed the data can also be a NumPy matrix
or 2d ndarray, a SciPy sparse matrix, or a PyGraphviz graph.
attr : keyword arguments, optional (default= no attributes)
Attributes to add to graph as key=value pairs.
See Also
--------
convert
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.Graph() # or DiGraph, MultiGraph, MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> G = nx.Graph(name='my graph')
>>> e = [(1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4)] # list of edges
>>> G = nx.Graph(e)
Arbitrary graph attribute pairs (key=value) may be assigned
>>> G = nx.Graph(e, day="Friday")
>>> G.graph
{'day': 'Friday'}
"""
self.edge_key_dict_factory = self.edge_key_dict_factory
Graph.__init__(self, incoming_graph_data, **attr)
@property
def adj(self):
"""Graph adjacency object holding the neighbors of each node.
This object is a read-only dict-like structure with node keys
and neighbor-dict values. The neighbor-dict is keyed by neighbor
to the edgekey-data-dict. So `G.adj[3][2][0]['color'] = 'blue'` sets
the color of the edge `(3, 2, 0)` to `"blue"`.
Iterating over G.adj behaves like a dict. Useful idioms include
`for nbr, nbrdict in G.adj[n].items():`.
The neighbor information is also provided by subscripting the graph.
So `for nbr, foovalue in G[node].data('foo', default=1):` works.
For directed graphs, `G.adj` holds outgoing (successor) info.
"""
return MultiAdjacencyView(self._adj)
[docs] def new_edge_key(self, u, v):
"""Return an unused key for edges between nodes `u` and `v`.
The nodes `u` and `v` do not need to be already in the graph.
Notes
-----
In the standard MultiGraph class the new key is the number of existing
edges between `u` and `v` (increased if necessary to ensure unused).
The first edge will have key 0, then 1, etc. If an edge is removed
further new_edge_keys may not be in this order.
Parameters
----------
u, v : nodes
Returns
-------
key : int
"""
try:
keydict = self._adj[u][v]
except KeyError:
return 0
key = len(keydict)
while key in keydict:
key += 1
return key
[docs] def add_edge(self, u_for_edge, v_for_edge, key=None, **attr):
"""Add an edge between u and v.
The nodes u and v will be automatically added if they are
not already in the graph.
Edge attributes can be specified with keywords or by directly
accessing the edge's attribute dictionary. See examples below.
Parameters
----------
u_for_edge, v_for_edge : nodes
Nodes can be, for example, strings or numbers.
Nodes must be hashable (and not None) Python objects.
key : hashable identifier, optional (default=lowest unused integer)
Used to distinguish multiedges between a pair of nodes.
attr : keyword arguments, optional
Edge data (or labels or objects) can be assigned using
keyword arguments.
Returns
-------
The edge key assigned to the edge.
See Also
--------
add_edges_from : add a collection of edges
Notes
-----
To replace/update edge data, use the optional key argument
to identify a unique edge. Otherwise a new edge will be created.
NetworkX algorithms designed for weighted graphs cannot use
multigraphs directly because it is not clear how to handle
multiedge weights. Convert to Graph using edge attribute
'weight' to enable weighted graph algorithms.
Default keys are generated using the method `new_edge_key()`.
This method can be overridden by subclassing the base class and
providing a custom `new_edge_key()` method.
Examples
--------
The following all add the edge e=(1, 2) to graph G:
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph()
>>> e = (1, 2)
>>> ekey = G.add_edge(1, 2) # explicit two-node form
>>> G.add_edge(*e) # single edge as tuple of two nodes
1
>>> G.add_edges_from( [(1, 2)] ) # add edges from iterable container
[2]
Associate data to edges using keywords:
>>> ekey = G.add_edge(1, 2, weight=3)
>>> ekey = G.add_edge(1, 2, key=0, weight=4) # update data for key=0
>>> ekey = G.add_edge(1, 3, weight=7, capacity=15, length=342.7)
For non-string attribute keys, use subscript notation.
>>> ekey = G.add_edge(1, 2)
>>> G[1][2][0].update({0: 5})
>>> G.edges[1, 2, 0].update({0: 5})
"""
u, v = u_for_edge, v_for_edge
# add nodes
if u not in self._adj:
self._adj[u] = self.adjlist_inner_dict_factory()
self._node[u] = {}
if v not in self._adj:
self._adj[v] = self.adjlist_inner_dict_factory()
self._node[v] = {}
if key is None:
key = self.new_edge_key(u, v)
if v in self._adj[u]:
keydict = self._adj[u][v]
datadict = keydict.get(key, self.edge_attr_dict_factory())
datadict.update(attr)
keydict[key] = datadict
else:
# selfloops work this way without special treatment
datadict = self.edge_attr_dict_factory()
datadict.update(attr)
keydict = self.edge_key_dict_factory()
keydict[key] = datadict
self._adj[u][v] = keydict
self._adj[v][u] = keydict
return key
[docs] def add_edges_from(self, ebunch_to_add, **attr):
"""Add all the edges in ebunch_to_add.
Parameters
----------
ebunch_to_add : container of edges
Each edge given in the container will be added to the
graph. The edges can be:
- 2-tuples (u, v) or
- 3-tuples (u, v, d) for an edge data dict d, or
- 3-tuples (u, v, k) for not iterable key k, or
- 4-tuples (u, v, k, d) for an edge with data and key k
attr : keyword arguments, optional
Edge data (or labels or objects) can be assigned using
keyword arguments.
Returns
-------
A list of edge keys assigned to the edges in `ebunch`.
See Also
--------
add_edge : add a single edge
add_weighted_edges_from : convenient way to add weighted edges
Notes
-----
Adding the same edge twice has no effect but any edge data
will be updated when each duplicate edge is added.
Edge attributes specified in an ebunch take precedence over
attributes specified via keyword arguments.
Default keys are generated using the method ``new_edge_key()``.
This method can be overridden by subclassing the base class and
providing a custom ``new_edge_key()`` method.
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.Graph() # or DiGraph, MultiGraph, MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> G.add_edges_from([(0, 1), (1, 2)]) # using a list of edge tuples
>>> e = zip(range(0, 3), range(1, 4))
>>> G.add_edges_from(e) # Add the path graph 0-1-2-3
Associate data to edges
>>> G.add_edges_from([(1, 2), (2, 3)], weight=3)
>>> G.add_edges_from([(3, 4), (1, 4)], label='WN2898')
"""
keylist = []
for e in ebunch_to_add:
ne = len(e)
if ne == 4:
u, v, key, dd = e
elif ne == 3:
u, v, dd = e
key = None
elif ne == 2:
u, v = e
dd = {}
key = None
else:
msg = "Edge tuple {} must be a 2-tuple, 3-tuple or 4-tuple."
raise NetworkXError(msg.format(e))
ddd = {}
ddd.update(attr)
try:
ddd.update(dd)
except:
if ne != 3:
raise
key = dd
key = self.add_edge(u, v, key)
self[u][v][key].update(ddd)
keylist.append(key)
return keylist
[docs] def remove_edge(self, u, v, key=None):
"""Remove an edge between u and v.
Parameters
----------
u, v : nodes
Remove an edge between nodes u and v.
key : hashable identifier, optional (default=None)
Used to distinguish multiple edges between a pair of nodes.
If None remove a single (arbitrary) edge between u and v.
Raises
------
NetworkXError
If there is not an edge between u and v, or
if there is no edge with the specified key.
See Also
--------
remove_edges_from : remove a collection of edges
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph()
>>> nx.add_path(G, [0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> G.remove_edge(0, 1)
>>> e = (1, 2)
>>> G.remove_edge(*e) # unpacks e from an edge tuple
For multiple edges
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph() # or MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> G.add_edges_from([(1, 2), (1, 2), (1, 2)]) # key_list returned
[0, 1, 2]
>>> G.remove_edge(1, 2) # remove a single (arbitrary) edge
For edges with keys
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph() # or MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> G.add_edge(1, 2, key='first')
'first'
>>> G.add_edge(1, 2, key='second')
'second'
>>> G.remove_edge(1, 2, key='second')
"""
try:
d = self._adj[u][v]
except KeyError:
raise NetworkXError(
"The edge %s-%s is not in the graph." % (u, v))
# remove the edge with specified data
if key is None:
d.popitem()
else:
try:
del d[key]
except KeyError:
msg = "The edge %s-%s with key %s is not in the graph."
raise NetworkXError(msg % (u, v, key))
if len(d) == 0:
# remove the key entries if last edge
del self._adj[u][v]
if u != v: # check for selfloop
del self._adj[v][u]
[docs] def remove_edges_from(self, ebunch):
"""Remove all edges specified in ebunch.
Parameters
----------
ebunch: list or container of edge tuples
Each edge given in the list or container will be removed
from the graph. The edges can be:
- 2-tuples (u, v) All edges between u and v are removed.
- 3-tuples (u, v, key) The edge identified by key is removed.
- 4-tuples (u, v, key, data) where data is ignored.
See Also
--------
remove_edge : remove a single edge
Notes
-----
Will fail silently if an edge in ebunch is not in the graph.
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.path_graph(4) # or DiGraph, MultiGraph, MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> ebunch=[(1, 2), (2, 3)]
>>> G.remove_edges_from(ebunch)
Removing multiple copies of edges
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph()
>>> keys = G.add_edges_from([(1, 2), (1, 2), (1, 2)])
>>> G.remove_edges_from([(1, 2), (1, 2)])
>>> list(G.edges())
[(1, 2)]
>>> G.remove_edges_from([(1, 2), (1, 2)]) # silently ignore extra copy
>>> list(G.edges) # now empty graph
[]
"""
for e in ebunch:
try:
self.remove_edge(*e[:3])
except NetworkXError:
pass
[docs] def has_edge(self, u, v, key=None):
"""Return True if the graph has an edge between nodes u and v.
This is the same as `v in G[u] or key in G[u][v]`
without KeyError exceptions.
Parameters
----------
u, v : nodes
Nodes can be, for example, strings or numbers.
key : hashable identifier, optional (default=None)
If specified return True only if the edge with
key is found.
Returns
-------
edge_ind : bool
True if edge is in the graph, False otherwise.
Examples
--------
Can be called either using two nodes u, v, an edge tuple (u, v),
or an edge tuple (u, v, key).
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph() # or MultiDiGraph
>>> nx.add_path(G, [0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> G.has_edge(0, 1) # using two nodes
True
>>> e = (0, 1)
>>> G.has_edge(*e) # e is a 2-tuple (u, v)
True
>>> G.add_edge(0, 1, key='a')
'a'
>>> G.has_edge(0, 1, key='a') # specify key
True
>>> e=(0, 1, 'a')
>>> G.has_edge(*e) # e is a 3-tuple (u, v, 'a')
True
The following syntax are equivalent:
>>> G.has_edge(0, 1)
True
>>> 1 in G[0] # though this gives :exc:`KeyError` if 0 not in G
True
"""
try:
if key is None:
return v in self._adj[u]
else:
return key in self._adj[u][v]
except KeyError:
return False
@property
def edges(self):
"""Return an iterator over the edges.
edges(self, nbunch=None, data=False, keys=False, default=None)
The EdgeView provides set-like operations on the edge-tuples
as well as edge attribute lookup. When called, it also provides
an EdgeDataView object which allows control of access to edge
attributes (but does not provide set-like operations).
Hence, `G.edges[u, v]['color']` provides the value of the color
attribute for edge `(u, v)` while
`for (u, v, c) in G.edges(data='color', default='red'):`
iterates through all the edges yielding the color attribute.
Edges are returned as tuples with optional data and keys
in the order (node, neighbor, key, data).
Parameters
----------
nbunch : single node, container, or all nodes (default= all nodes)
The view will only report edges incident to these nodes.
data : string or bool, optional (default=False)
The edge attribute returned in 3-tuple (u, v, ddict[data]).
If True, return edge attribute dict in 3-tuple (u, v, ddict).
If False, return 2-tuple (u, v).
keys : bool, optional (default=False)
If True, return edge keys with each edge.
default : value, optional (default=None)
Value used for edges that dont have the requested attribute.
Only relevant if data is not True or False.
Returns
-------
edges : MultiEdgeView
A view of edge attributes, usually it iterates over (u, v)
(u, v, k) or (u, v, k, d) tuples of edges, but can also be
used for attribute lookup as `edges[u, v, k]['foo']`.
Notes
-----
Nodes in nbunch that are not in the graph will be (quietly) ignored.
For directed graphs this returns the out-edges.
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph() # or MultiDiGraph
>>> nx.add_path(G, [0, 1, 2])
>>> key = G.add_edge(2, 3, weight=5)
>>> [e for e in G.edges()]
[(0, 1), (1, 2), (2, 3)]
>>> G.edges.data() # default data is {} (empty dict)
MultiEdgeDataView([(0, 1, {}), (1, 2, {}), (2, 3, {'weight': 5})])
>>> G.edges.data('weight', default=1)
MultiEdgeDataView([(0, 1, 1), (1, 2, 1), (2, 3, 5)])
>>> G.edges(keys=True) # default keys are integers
MultiEdgeView([(0, 1, 0), (1, 2, 0), (2, 3, 0)])
>>> G.edges.data(keys=True)
MultiEdgeDataView([(0, 1, 0, {}), (1, 2, 0, {}), (2, 3, 0, {'weight': 5})])
>>> G.edges.data('weight', default=1, keys=True)
MultiEdgeDataView([(0, 1, 0, 1), (1, 2, 0, 1), (2, 3, 0, 5)])
>>> G.edges([0, 3])
MultiEdgeDataView([(0, 1), (3, 2)])
>>> G.edges(0)
MultiEdgeDataView([(0, 1)])
"""
self.__dict__['edges'] = edges = MultiEdgeView(self)
return edges
[docs] def get_edge_data(self, u, v, key=None, default=None):
"""Return the attribute dictionary associated with edge (u, v).
This is identical to `G[u][v][key]` except the default is returned
instead of an exception is the edge doesn't exist.
Parameters
----------
u, v : nodes
default : any Python object (default=None)
Value to return if the edge (u, v) is not found.
key : hashable identifier, optional (default=None)
Return data only for the edge with specified key.
Returns
-------
edge_dict : dictionary
The edge attribute dictionary.
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph() # or MultiDiGraph
>>> key = G.add_edge(0, 1, key='a', weight=7)
>>> G[0][1]['a'] # key='a'
{'weight': 7}
>>> G.edges[0, 1, 'a'] # key='a'
{'weight': 7}
Warning: we protect the graph data structure by making
`G.edges` and `G[1][2]` read-only dict-like structures.
However, you can assign values to attributes in e.g.
`G.edges[1, 2, 'a']` or `G[1][2]['a']` using an additional
bracket as shown next. You need to specify all edge info
to assign to the edge data associated with an edge.
>>> G[0][1]['a']['weight'] = 10
>>> G.edges[0, 1, 'a']['weight'] = 10
>>> G[0][1]['a']['weight']
10
>>> G.edges[1, 0, 'a']['weight']
10
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph() # or MultiDiGraph
>>> nx.add_path(G, [0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> G.get_edge_data(0, 1)
{0: {}}
>>> e = (0, 1)
>>> G.get_edge_data(*e) # tuple form
{0: {}}
>>> G.get_edge_data('a', 'b', default=0) # edge not in graph, return 0
0
"""
try:
if key is None:
return self._adj[u][v]
else:
return self._adj[u][v][key]
except KeyError:
return default
@property
def degree(self):
"""A DegreeView for the Graph as G.degree or G.degree().
The node degree is the number of edges adjacent to the node.
The weighted node degree is the sum of the edge weights for
edges incident to that node.
This object provides an iterator for (node, degree) as well as
lookup for the degree for a single node.
Parameters
----------
nbunch : single node, container, or all nodes (default= all nodes)
The view will only report edges incident to these nodes.
weight : string or None, optional (default=None)
The name of an edge attribute that holds the numerical value used
as a weight. If None, then each edge has weight 1.
The degree is the sum of the edge weights adjacent to the node.
Returns
-------
If a single node is requested
deg : int
Degree of the node, if a single node is passed as argument.
OR if multiple nodes are requested
nd_iter : iterator
The iterator returns two-tuples of (node, degree).
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.Graph() # or DiGraph, MultiGraph, MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> nx.add_path(G, [0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> G.degree(0) # node 0 with degree 1
1
>>> list(G.degree([0, 1]))
[(0, 1), (1, 2)]
"""
self.__dict__['degree'] = degree = MultiDegreeView(self)
return degree
def is_multigraph(self):
"""Return True if graph is a multigraph, False otherwise."""
return True
def is_directed(self):
"""Return True if graph is directed, False otherwise."""
return False
[docs] def fresh_copy(self):
"""Return a fresh copy graph with the same data structure.
A fresh copy has no nodes, edges or graph attributes. It is
the same data structure as the current graph. This method is
typically used to create an empty version of the graph.
Notes
-----
If you subclass the base class you should overwrite this method
to return your class of graph.
"""
return MultiGraph()
[docs] def copy(self, as_view=False):
"""Return a copy of the graph.
The copy method by default returns a shallow copy of the graph
and attributes. That is, if an attribute is a container, that
container is shared by the original an the copy.
Use Python's `copy.deepcopy` for new containers.
If `as_view` is True then a view is returned instead of a copy.
Notes
-----
All copies reproduce the graph structure, but data attributes
may be handled in different ways. There are four types of copies
of a graph that people might want.
Deepcopy -- The default behavior is a "deepcopy" where the graph
structure as well as all data attributes and any objects they might
contain are copied. The entire graph object is new so that changes
in the copy do not affect the original object. (see Python's
copy.deepcopy)
Data Reference (Shallow) -- For a shallow copy the graph structure
is copied but the edge, node and graph attribute dicts are
references to those in the original graph. This saves
time and memory but could cause confusion if you change an attribute
in one graph and it changes the attribute in the other.
NetworkX does not provide this level of shallow copy.
Independent Shallow -- This copy creates new independent attribute
dicts and then does a shallow copy of the attributes. That is, any
attributes that are containers are shared between the new graph
and the original. This is exactly what `dict.copy()` provides.
You can obtain this style copy using:
>>> G = nx.path_graph(5)
>>> H = G.copy()
>>> H = G.copy(as_view=False)
>>> H = nx.Graph(G)
>>> H = G.fresh_copy().__class__(G)
Fresh Data -- For fresh data, the graph structure is copied while
new empty data attribute dicts are created. The resulting graph
is independent of the original and it has no edge, node or graph
attributes. Fresh copies are not enabled. Instead use:
>>> H = G.fresh_copy()
>>> H.add_nodes_from(G)
>>> H.add_edges_from(G.edges)
View -- Inspired by dict-views, graph-views act like read-only
versions of the original graph, providing a copy of the original
structure without requiring any memory for copying the information.
See the Python copy module for more information on shallow
and deep copies, https://docs.python.org/2/library/copy.html.
Parameters
----------
as_view : bool, optional (default=False)
If True, the returned graph-view provides a read-only view
of the original graph without actually copying any data.
Returns
-------
G : Graph
A copy of the graph.
See Also
--------
to_directed: return a directed copy of the graph.
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.path_graph(4) # or DiGraph, MultiGraph, MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> H = G.copy()
"""
if as_view is True:
return nx.graphviews.MultiGraphView(self)
G = self.fresh_copy()
G.graph.update(self.graph)
G.add_nodes_from((n, d.copy()) for n, d in self._node.items())
G.add_edges_from((u, v, key, datadict.copy())
for u, nbrs in self._adj.items()
for v, keydict in nbrs.items()
for key, datadict in keydict.items())
return G
[docs] def to_directed(self, as_view=False):
"""Return a directed representation of the graph.
Returns
-------
G : MultiDiGraph
A directed graph with the same name, same nodes, and with
each edge (u, v, data) replaced by two directed edges
(u, v, data) and (v, u, data).
Notes
-----
This returns a "deepcopy" of the edge, node, and
graph attributes which attempts to completely copy
all of the data and references.
This is in contrast to the similar D=DiGraph(G) which returns a
shallow copy of the data.
See the Python copy module for more information on shallow
and deep copies, https://docs.python.org/2/library/copy.html.
Warning: If you have subclassed MultiGraph to use dict-like objects
in the data structure, those changes do not transfer to the
MultiDiGraph created by this method.
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.Graph() # or MultiGraph, etc
>>> G.add_edge(0, 1)
>>> H = G.to_directed()
>>> list(H.edges)
[(0, 1), (1, 0)]
If already directed, return a (deep) copy
>>> G = nx.DiGraph() # or MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> G.add_edge(0, 1)
>>> H = G.to_directed()
>>> list(H.edges)
[(0, 1)]
"""
if as_view is True:
return nx.graphviews.MultiDiGraphView(self)
# deepcopy when not a view
from networkx.classes.multidigraph import MultiDiGraph
G = MultiDiGraph()
G.graph.update(deepcopy(self.graph))
G.add_nodes_from((n, deepcopy(d)) for n, d in self._node.items())
G.add_edges_from((u, v, key, deepcopy(datadict))
for u, nbrs in self.adj.items()
for v, keydict in nbrs.items()
for key, datadict in keydict.items())
return G
[docs] def to_undirected(self, as_view=False):
"""Return an undirected copy of the graph.
Returns
-------
G : Graph/MultiGraph
A deepcopy of the graph.
See Also
--------
copy, add_edge, add_edges_from
Notes
-----
This returns a "deepcopy" of the edge, node, and
graph attributes which attempts to completely copy
all of the data and references.
This is in contrast to the similar `G = nx.MultiGraph(D)`
which returns a shallow copy of the data.
See the Python copy module for more information on shallow
and deep copies, https://docs.python.org/2/library/copy.html.
Warning: If you have subclassed MultiiGraph to use dict-like
objects in the data structure, those changes do not transfer
to the MultiGraph created by this method.
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.path_graph(2) # or MultiGraph, etc
>>> H = G.to_directed()
>>> list(H.edges)
[(0, 1), (1, 0)]
>>> G2 = H.to_undirected()
>>> list(G2.edges)
[(0, 1)]
"""
if as_view is True:
return nx.graphviews.MultiGraphView(self)
# deepcopy when not a view
G = MultiGraph()
G.graph.update(deepcopy(self.graph))
G.add_nodes_from((n, deepcopy(d)) for n, d in self._node.items())
G.add_edges_from((u, v, key, deepcopy(datadict))
for u, nbrs in self._adj.items()
for v, keydict in nbrs.items()
for key, datadict in keydict.items())
return G
[docs] def subgraph(self, nodes):
"""Return a SubGraph view of the subgraph induced on nodes in `nodes`.
The induced subgraph of the graph contains the nodes in `nodes`
and the edges between those nodes.
Parameters
----------
nodes : list, iterable
A container of nodes which will be iterated through once.
Returns
-------
G : SubGraph View
A subgraph view of the graph. The graph structure cannot be
changed but node/edge attributes can and are shared with the
original graph.
Notes
-----
The graph, edge and node attributes are shared with the original graph.
Changes to the graph structure is ruled out by the view, but changes
to attributes are reflected in the original graph.
To create a subgraph with its own copy of the edge/node attributes use:
G.subgraph(nodes).copy()
For an inplace reduction of a graph to a subgraph you can remove nodes:
G.remove_nodes_from([n for n in G if n not in set(nodes)])
Examples
--------
>>> G = nx.Graph() # or DiGraph, MultiGraph, MultiDiGraph, etc
>>> nx.add_path(G, [0, 1, 2, 3])
>>> H = G.subgraph([0, 1, 2])
>>> list(H.edges)
[(0, 1), (1, 2)]
"""
induced_nodes = nx.filters.show_nodes(self.nbunch_iter(nodes))
SubGraph = nx.graphviews.SubMultiGraph
# if already a subgraph, don't make a chain
if hasattr(self, '_NODE_OK'):
return SubGraph(self._graph, induced_nodes, self._EDGE_OK)
return SubGraph(self, induced_nodes)
[docs] def number_of_edges(self, u=None, v=None):
"""Return the number of edges between two nodes.
Parameters
----------
u, v : nodes, optional (Gefault=all edges)
If u and v are specified, return the number of edges between
u and v. Otherwise return the total number of all edges.
Returns
-------
nedges : int
The number of edges in the graph. If nodes `u` and `v` are
specified return the number of edges between those nodes. If
the graph is directed, this only returns the number of edges
from `u` to `v`.
See Also
--------
size
Examples
--------
For undirected multigraphs, this method counts the total number
of edges in the graph::
>>> G = nx.MultiGraph()
>>> G.add_edges_from([(0, 1), (0, 1), (1, 2)])
[0, 1, 0]
>>> G.number_of_edges()
3
If you specify two nodes, this counts the total number of edges
joining the two nodes::
>>> G.number_of_edges(0, 1)
2
For directed multigraphs, this method can count the total number
of directed edges from `u` to `v`::
>>> G = nx.MultiDiGraph()
>>> G.add_edges_from([(0, 1), (0, 1), (1, 0)])
[0, 1, 0]
>>> G.number_of_edges(0, 1)
2
>>> G.number_of_edges(1, 0)
1
"""
if u is None:
return self.size()
try:
edgedata = self._adj[u][v]
except KeyError:
return 0 # no such edge
return len(edgedata)