List of all classes, functions and methods in python-igraph
class EdgeSeq(_EdgeSeq):
Class representing a sequence of edges in the graph.
This class is most easily accessed by the es
field of the Graph
object, which returns an ordered sequence of all edges in the graph. The edge sequence can be refined by invoking the EdgeSeq.select()
method. EdgeSeq.select()
can also be accessed by simply calling the EdgeSeq
object.
An alternative way to create an edge sequence referring to a given graph is to use the constructor directly:
>>> g = Graph.Full(3) >>> es = EdgeSeq(g) >>> restricted_es = EdgeSeq(g, [0, 1])
The individual edges can be accessed by indexing the edge sequence object. It can be used as an iterable as well, or even in a list comprehension:
>>> g=Graph.Full(3) >>> for e in g.es: ... print(e.tuple) ... (0, 1) (0, 2) (1, 2) >>> [max(e.tuple) for e in g.es] [1, 2, 2]
The edge sequence can also be used as a dictionary where the keys are the attribute names. The values corresponding to the keys are the values of the given attribute of every edge in the graph:
>>> g=Graph.Full(3) >>> for idx, e in enumerate(g.es): ... e["weight"] = idx*(idx+1) ... >>> g.es["weight"] [0, 2, 6] >>> g.es["weight"] = range(3) >>> g.es["weight"] [0, 1, 2]
If you specify a sequence that is shorter than the number of edges in the EdgeSeq, the sequence is reused:
>>> g = Graph.Tree(7, 2) >>> g.es["color"] = ["red", "green"] >>> g.es["color"] ['red', 'green', 'red', 'green', 'red', 'green']
You can even pass a single string or integer, it will be considered as a sequence of length 1:
>>> g.es["color"] = "red" >>> g.es["color"] ['red', 'red', 'red', 'red', 'red', 'red']
Some methods of the edge sequences are simply proxy methods to the corresponding methods in the Graph
object. One such example is EdgeSeq.is_multiple()
:
>>> g=Graph(3, [(0,1), (1,0), (1,2)]) >>> g.es.is_multiple() [False, True, False] >>> g.es.is_multiple() == g.is_multiple() True
Method | attributes |
Returns the list of all the edge attributes in the graph associated to this edge sequence. |
Method | find |
Returns the first edge of the edge sequence that matches some criteria. |
Method | select |
Selects a subset of the edge sequence based on some criteria |
Method | __call__ |
Shorthand notation to select() |
Inherited from EdgeSeq
:
Method | __new__ |
Create and return a new object. See help(type) for accurate signature. |
Method | attribute_names |
Returns the attribute name list of the graph's edges |
Method | get_attribute_values |
Returns the value of a given edge attribute for all edges. |
Method | is_all |
Returns whether the edge sequence contains all the edges exactly once, in the order of their edge IDs. |
Method | set_attribute_values |
Sets the value of a given edge attribute for all vertices @param attrname: the name of the attribute @param values: the new attribute values in a list |
Returns the list of all the edge attributes in the graph associated to this edge sequence.
igraph._igraph.EdgeSeq.find
Returns the first edge of the edge sequence that matches some criteria.
The selection criteria are equal to the ones allowed by VertexSeq.select
. See VertexSeq.select
for more details.
For instance, to find the first edge with weight larger than 5 in graph g
:
>>> g.es.find(weight_gt=5) #doctest:+SKIP
igraph._igraph.EdgeSeq.select
Selects a subset of the edge sequence based on some criteria
The selection criteria can be specified by the positional and the keyword arguments. Positional arguments are always processed before keyword arguments.
None
, an empty sequence is returned.True
, the edge will be included, otherwise it will be excluded.EdgeSeq.select()
. In this case, the indices do not refer directly to the edges of the graph but to the elements of the filtered edge sequence.Keyword arguments can be used to filter the edges based on their attributes and properties. The name of the keyword specifies the name of the attribute and the filtering operator, they should be concatenated by an underscore (_
) character. Attribute names can also contain underscores, but operator names don't, so the operator is always the largest trailing substring of the keyword name that does not contain an underscore. Possible operators are:
eq
: equal tone
: not equal tolt
: less thangt
: greater thanle
: less than or equal toge
: greater than or equal toin
: checks if the value of an attribute is in a given listnotin
: checks if the value of an attribute is not in a given listFor instance, if you want to filter edges with a numeric weight
property larger than 50, you have to write:
>>> g.es.select(weight_gt=50) #doctest: +SKIP
Similarly, to filter edges whose type
is in a list of predefined types:
>>> list_of_types = ["inhibitory", "excitatory"] >>> g.es.select(type_in=list_of_types) #doctest: +SKIP
If the operator is omitted, it defaults to eq
. For instance, the following selector selects edges whose type
property is intracluster
:
>>> g.es.select(type="intracluster") #doctest: +SKIP
In the case of an unknown operator, it is assumed that the recognized operator is part of the attribute name and the actual operator is eq
.
Keyword arguments are treated specially if they start with an underscore (_
). These are not real attributes but refer to specific properties of the edges, e.g., their centrality. The rules are as follows:
_source
or {_from} means the source vertex of an edge. For undirected graphs, only the eq
operator is supported and it is treated as {_incident} (since undirected graphs have no notion of edge directionality)._target
or {_to} means the target vertex of an edge. For undirected graphs, only the eq
operator is supported and it is treated as {_incident} (since undirected graphs have no notion of edge directionality)._within
ignores the operator and checks whether both endpoints of the edge lie within a specified set._between
ignores the operator and checks whether one endpoint of the edge lies within a specified set and the other endpoint lies within another specified set. The two sets must be given as a tuple._incident
ignores the operator and checks whether the edge is incident on a specific vertex or a set of vertices.Graph
object. This method is called with the edge sequence as its first argument (all others left at default values) and edges are filtered according to the value returned by the method.For instance, if you want to exclude edges with a betweenness centrality less than 2:
>>> g = Graph.Famous("zachary") >>> excl = g.es.select(_edge_betweenness_ge = 2)
To select edges originating from vertices 2 and 4:
>>> edges = g.es.select(_source_in = [2, 4])
To select edges lying entirely within the subgraph spanned by vertices 2, 3, 4 and 7:
>>> edges = g.es.select(_within = [2, 3, 4, 7])
To select edges with one endpoint in the vertex set containing vertices 2, 3, 4 and 7 and the other endpoint in the vertex set containing vertices 8 and 9:
>>> edges = g.es.select(_between = ([2, 3, 4, 7], [8, 9]))
For properties that take a long time to be computed (e.g., betweenness centrality for large graphs), it is advised to calculate the values in advance and store it in a graph attribute. The same applies when you are selecting based on the same property more than once in the same select()
call to avoid calculating it twice unnecessarily. For instance, the following would calculate betweenness centralities twice:
>>> edges = g.es.select(_edge_betweenness_gt=10, # doctest:+SKIP ... _edge_betweenness_lt=30)
It is advised to use this instead:
>>> g.es["bs"] = g.edge_betweenness() >>> edges = g.es.select(bs_gt=10, bs_lt=30)
Returns | the new, filtered edge sequence |
Shorthand notation to select()
This method simply passes all its arguments to EdgeSeq.select()
.