bfs_successors#

bfs_successors(G, source, depth_limit=None, sort_neighbors=None)[source]#

Returns an iterator of successors in breadth-first-search from source.

Parameters:
GNetworkX graph
sourcenode

Specify starting node for breadth-first search

depth_limitint, optional(default=len(G))

Specify the maximum search depth

sort_neighborsfunction

A function that takes the list of neighbors of given node as input, and returns an iterator over these neighbors but with custom ordering.

Returns:
succ: iterator

(node, successors) iterator where successors is the non-empty list of successors of node in a breadth first search from source. To appear in the iterator, node must have successors.

See also

bfs_tree
bfs_edges
edge_bfs

Notes

Based on http://www.ics.uci.edu/~eppstein/PADS/BFS.py by D. Eppstein, July 2004.The modifications to allow depth limits based on the Wikipedia article “Depth-limited-search”.

Examples

>>> G = nx.path_graph(3)
>>> print(dict(nx.bfs_successors(G, 0)))
{0: [1], 1: [2]}
>>> H = nx.Graph()
>>> H.add_edges_from([(0, 1), (0, 2), (1, 3), (1, 4), (2, 5), (2, 6)])
>>> print(dict(nx.bfs_successors(H, 0)))
{0: [1, 2], 1: [3, 4], 2: [5, 6]}
>>> G = nx.Graph()
>>> nx.add_path(G, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6])
>>> nx.add_path(G, [2, 7, 8, 9, 10])
>>> print(dict(nx.bfs_successors(G, source=1, depth_limit=3)))
{1: [0, 2], 2: [3, 7], 3: [4], 7: [8]}
>>> G = nx.DiGraph()
>>> nx.add_path(G, [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5])
>>> print(dict(nx.bfs_successors(G, source=3)))
{3: [4], 4: [5]}