Drawing and plotting routines for IGraph.
Plotting is dependent on the pycairo or cairocffi libraries that provide Python bindings to the popular Cairo library. This means that if you don't have pycairo or cairocffi installed, you won't be able to use the plotting capabilities. However, you can still use Graph.write_svg
to save the graph to an SVG file and view it from Mozilla Firefox (free) or edit it in Inkscape (free), Skencil (formerly known as Sketch, also free) or Adobe Illustrator.
Whenever the documentation refers to the pycairo library, you can safely replace it with cairocffi as the two are API-compatible.
Module | baseclasses |
Abstract base classes for the drawing routines. |
Module | colors |
Color handling functions. |
Module | coord |
Coordinate systems and related plotting routines |
Module | edge |
Drawers for various edge styles in graph plots. |
Module | graph |
Drawing routines to draw graphs. |
Module | metamagic |
Auxiliary classes for the default graph drawer in igraph. |
Module | shapes |
Shape drawing classes for igraph |
Module | text |
Drawers for labels on plots. |
Module | utils |
Utility classes for drawing routines. |
Module | vertex |
Drawing routines to draw the vertices of graphs. |
From __init__.py
:
Class |
|
Class representing an arbitrary plot |
Function | plot |
Plots the given object to the given target. |
Variable | cairo |
Undocumented |
Plots the given object to the given target.
Positional and keyword arguments not explicitly mentioned here will be passed down to the __plot__ method of the object being plotted. Since you are most likely interested in the keyword arguments available for graph plots, see Graph.__plot__
as well.
Parameters | |
obj | the object to be plotted |
target | the target where the object should be plotted. It can be one of the following types:
|
bbox | the bounding box of the plot. It must be a tuple with either two or four integers, or a BoundingBox object. If this is a tuple with two integers, it is interpreted as the width and height of the plot (in pixels for PNG images and on-screen plots, or in points for PDF, SVG and PostScript plots, where 72 pt = 1 inch = 2.54 cm). If this is a tuple with four integers, the first two denotes the X and Y coordinates of a corner and the latter two denoting the X and Y coordinates of the opposite corner. |
*args | Undocumented |
**kwds | Undocumented |
opacity | the opacity of the object being plotted. It can be used to overlap several plots of the same graph if you use the same layout for them -- for instance, you might plot a graph with opacity 0.5 and then plot its spanning tree over it with opacity 0.1. To achieve this, you'll need to modify the Plot object returned with Plot.add . |
palette | the palette primarily used on the plot if the added objects do not specify a private palette. Must be either an igraph.drawing.colors.Palette object or a string referring to a valid key of igraph.drawing.colors.palettes (see module igraph.drawing.colors ) or None. In the latter case, the default palette given by the configuration key plotting.palette is used. |
margin | the top, right, bottom, left margins as a 4-tuple. If it has less than 4 elements or is a single float, the elements will be re-used until the length is at least 4. The default margin is 20 on each side. |
inline | whether to try and show the plot object inline in the current IPython notebook. Passing None here or omitting this keyword argument will look up the preferred behaviour from the shell.ipython.inlining.Plot configuration key. Note that this keyword argument has an effect only if igraph is run inside IPython and target is None. |
Returns | |
an appropriate Plot object. | |
See Also | |
Graph.__plot__ |