Use this if you are using igraph from R
igraph-attribute-combination {igraph} | R Documentation |
Many times, when the structure of a graph is modified, vertices/edges map of
the original graph map to vertices/edges in the newly created (modified)
graph. For example simplify
maps multiple edges to single
edges. igraph provides a flexible mechanism to specify what to do with the
vertex/edge attributes in these cases.
The functions that support the combination of attributes have one or two
extra arguments called vertex.attr.comb
and/or edge.attr.comb
that specify how to perform the mapping of the attributes. E.g.
contract
contracts many vertices into a single one, the
attributes of the vertices can be combined and stores as the vertex
attributes of the new graph.
The specification of the combination of (vertex or edge) attributes can be given as
a character scalar,
a function object or
a list of character scalars and/or function objects.
If it is a character scalar, then it refers to one of the predefined combinations, see their list below.
If it is a function, then the given function is expected to perform the combination. It will be called once for each new vertex/edge in the graph, with a single argument: the attribute values of the vertices that map to that single vertex.
The third option, a list can be used to specify different combination methods for different attributes. A named entry of the list corresponds to the attribute with the same name. An unnamed entry (i.e. if the name is the empty string) of the list specifies the default combination method. I.e.
list(weight="sum", "ignore")
specifies that the weight of the new edge should be sum of the weights of the corresponding edges in the old graph; and that the rest of the attributes should be ignored (=dropped).
The following combination behaviors are predefined:
The attribute is ignored and dropped.
The sum of the attributes is
calculated. This does not work for character attributes and works for
complex attributes only if they have a sum
generic defined. (E.g. it
works for sparse matrices from the Matrix
package, because they have
a sum
method.)
The product of the attributes is
calculated. This does not work for character attributes and works for
complex attributes only if they have a prod
function defined.
The minimum of the attributes is calculated and returned.
For character and complex attributes the standard R min
function is
used.
The maximum of the attributes is calculated and
returned. For character and complex attributes the standard R max
function is used.
Chooses one of the supplied
attribute values, uniformly randomly. For character and complex attributes
this is implemented by calling sample
.
Always
chooses the first attribute value. It is implemented by calling the
head
function.
Always chooses the last attribute
value. It is implemented by calling the tail
function.
The mean of the attributes is calculated and returned.
For character and complex attributes this simply calls the mean
function.
The median of the attributes is selected.
Calls the R median
function for all attribute types.
Concatenate the attributes, using the c
function. This results almost always a complex attribute.
Gabor Csardi csardi.gabor@gmail.com
graph_attr
, vertex_attr
,
edge_attr
on how to use graph/vertex/edge attributes in
general. igraph_options
on igraph parameters.
g <- graph( c(1,2, 1,2, 1,2, 2,3, 3,4) )
E(g)$weight <- 1:5
## print attribute values with the graph
igraph_options(print.graph.attributes=TRUE)
igraph_options(print.vertex.attributes=TRUE)
igraph_options(print.edge.attributes=TRUE)
## new attribute is the sum of the old ones
simplify(g, edge.attr.comb="sum")
## collect attributes into a string
simplify(g, edge.attr.comb=toString)
## concatenate them into a vector, this creates a complex
## attribute
simplify(g, edge.attr.comb="concat")
E(g)$name <- letters[seq_len(ecount(g))]
## both attributes are collected into strings
simplify(g, edge.attr.comb=toString)
## harmonic average of weights, names are dropped
simplify(g, edge.attr.comb=list(weight=function(x) length(x)/sum(1/x),
name="ignore"))