Glossary¶
- dictionary
A Python dictionary maps keys to values. Also known as “hashes”, or “associative arrays” in other programming languages. See https://docs.python.org/2/tutorial/datastructures.html#dictionaries
- edge
Edges are either two-tuples of nodes
(u, v)
or three tuples of nodes with an edge attribute dictionary(u, v, dict)
.- ebunch
An iteratable container of edge tuples like a list, iterator, or file.
- edge attribute
Edges can have arbitrary Python objects assigned as attributes by using keyword/value pairs when adding an edge assigning to the
G.edges[u][v]
attribute dictionary for the specified edge u-v.- hashable
An object is hashable if it has a hash value which never changes during its lifetime (it needs a
__hash__()
method), and can be compared to other objects (it needs an__eq__()
or__cmp__()
method). Hashable objects which compare equal must have the same hash value.Hashability makes an object usable as a dictionary key and a set member, because these data structures use the hash value internally.
All of Python’s immutable built-in objects are hashable, while no mutable containers (such as lists or dictionaries) are. Objects which are instances of user-defined classes are hashable by default; they all compare unequal, and their hash value is their
id()
.Definition from https://docs.python.org/2/glossary.html
- nbunch
An nbunch is a single node, container of nodes or None (representing all nodes). It can be a list, set, graph, etc.. To filter an nbunch so that only nodes actually in
G
appear, useG.nbunch_iter(nbunch)
.- node
A node can be any hashable Python object except None.
- node attribute
Nodes can have arbitrary Python objects assigned as attributes by using keyword/value pairs when adding a node or assigning to the
G.nodes[n]
attribute dictionary for the specified noden
.