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Graphy: A Graph Theory Library for Ruby

A framework for graph data structures and algorithms.

This library is based on GRATR (itself a fork of RGL).

Graph algorithms currently provided are:

  • Topological Sort
  • Strongly Connected Components
  • Transitive Closure
  • Rural Chinese Postman
  • Biconnected

These are based on more general algorithm patterns:

  • Breadth First Search
  • Depth First Search
  • A* Search
  • Floyd-Warshall
  • Best First Search
  • Djikstra's Algorithm
  • Lexicographic Search

The Tour

Arcs

There are two Arc classes, Graphy::Arc and Graphy::Edge.

Graph Types

There are a number of different graph types, each of which provide different features and constraints:

Graphy::Digraph and it's pseudonym Graphy::DirectedGraph:

  • Single directed edges between vertices
  • Loops are forbidden

Graphy::DirectedPseudoGraph:

  • Multiple directed edges between vertices
  • Loops are forbidden

Graphy::DirectedMultiGraph:

  • Multiple directed edges between vertices
  • Loops on vertices

Graphy::UndirectedGraph, Graphy::UndirectedPseudoGraph, and Graph::UndirectedMultiGraph are similar but all edges are undirected.

Data Structures

Use the Graphy::AdjacencyGraph module provides a generalized adjacency list and an edge list adaptor.

The Graphy::Digraph class is the general purpose "swiss army knife" of graph classes, most of the other classes are just modifications to this class. It is optimized for efficient access to just the out-edges, fast vertex insertion and removal at the cost of extra space overhead, etc.

Example Usage

Require the library:

require 'graphy'

If you'd like to include all the classes in the current scope (so you don't have to prefix with GraphTeory::), just:

include Graphy

Let's play with the library a bit in IRB:

>> dg = Digraph[1,2, 2,3, 2,4, 4,5, 6,4, 1,6]
=> Graphy::Digraph[[2, 3], [1, 6], [2, 4], [4, 5], [1, 2], [6, 4]] 

A few properties of the graph

>> dg.directed?
=> true
>> dg.vertex?(4)
=> true
>> dg.edge?(2,4)
=> true
>> dg.edge?(4,2)
=> false
>> dg.vertices
=> [5, 6, 1, 2, 3, 4]

Every object could be a vertex, even the class object Object:

>> dg.vertex?(Object)
=> false
>> UndirectedGraph.new(dg).edges.sort.to_s
=> "(1=2)(2=3)(2=4)(4=5)(1=6)(4=6)"

Add inverse edge (4-2) to directed graph:

>> dg.add_edge!(4,2)
=> GRATR::Digraph[[2, 3], [1, 6], [4, 2], [2, 4], [4, 5], [1, 2], [6, 4]]

(4-2) == (2-4) in the undirected graph:

>> UndirectedGraph.new(dg).edges.sort.to_s
=> "(1=2)(2=3)(2=4)(4=5)(1=6)(4=6)"

(4-2) != (2-4) in directed graphs:

>> dg.edges.sort.to_s
=> "(1-2)(1-6)(2-3)(2-4)(4-2)(4-5)(6-4)"
>> dg.remove_edge! 4,2
=> GRATR::Digraph[[2, 3], [1, 6], [2, 4], [4, 5], [1, 2], [6, 4]] 

Topological sorting is realized with an iterator:

>> dg.topsort         
=> [1, 2, 3, 6, 4, 5]
>> y = 0; dg.topsort { |v| y += v }; y
=> 21

You can use DOT to visualize the graph:

>> require 'graph/dot'
>> dg.write_to_graphic_file('jpg','visualize')

Here's an example showing the module inheritance hierarchy:

>> module_graph = Digraph.new
>> ObjectSpace.each_object(Module) do |m|
>>   m.ancestors.each {|a| module_graph.add_edge!(m,a) if m != a} 
>> end
>> gv = module_graph.vertices.select {|v| v.to_s.match(/Graphy/) }
>> module_graph.induced_subgraph(gv).write_to_graphic_file('jpg','module_graph')

Look for more in the examples directory.

History

This library is based on GRATR by Shawn Garbett (itself a fork of Horst Duchene's RGL library) which is heavily influenced by the Boost Graph Library (BGL).

This fork attempts to modernize and extend the API and tests.

References

For more information on Graph Theory, you may want to read:

Credits

See CREDITS.markdown

TODO

See TODO.markdown

CHANGELOG

See CHANGELOG.markdown

License

See LICENSE

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