These functions attempt to print a graph to the terminal in a human readable form.
# S3 method for igraph
print(x, full = igraph_opt("print.full"),
graph.attributes = igraph_opt("print.graph.attributes"),
vertex.attributes = igraph_opt("print.vertex.attributes"),
edge.attributes = igraph_opt("print.edge.attributes"), names = TRUE,
max.lines = igraph_opt("auto.print.lines"), ...)# S3 method for igraph
summary(object, ...)
The graph to print.
Logical scalar, whether to print the graph structure itself as well.
Logical constant, whether to print graph attributes.
Logical constant, whether to print vertex attributes.
Logical constant, whether to print edge attributes.
Logical constant, whether to print symbolic vertex names (ie.
the name vertex attribute) or vertex ids.
The maximum number of lines to use. The rest of the output will be truncated.
The graph of which the summary will be printed.
Additional agruments.
All these functions return the graph invisibly.
summary.igraph prints the number of vertices, edges and whether the
graph is directed.
str.igraph prints the same information, and also lists the edges, and
optionally graph, vertex and/or edge attributes.
print.igraph behaves either as summary.igraph or
str.igraph depending on the full argument. See also the
‘print.full’ igraph option and igraph_opt.
The graph summary printed by summary.igraph (and print.igraph
and str.igraph) consists one or more lines. The first line contains
the basic properties of the graph, and the rest contains its attributes.
Here is an example, a small star graph with weighed directed edges and named
vertices:
IGRAPH DNW- 10 9 -- In-star
+ attr: name (g/c), mode (g/c), center (g/n), name (v/c),
weight (e/n) The first line always
starts with IGRAPH, showing you that the object is an igraph graph.
Then a four letter long code string is printed. The first letter
distinguishes between directed (‘D’) and undirected
(‘U’) graphs. The second letter is ‘N’ for named
graphs, i.e. graphs with the name vertex attribute set. The third
letter is ‘W’ for weighted graphs, i.e. graphs with the
weight edge attribute set. The fourth letter is ‘B’ for
bipartite graphs, i.e. for graphs with the type vertex attribute set.
Then, after two dashes, the name of the graph is printed, if it has one,
i.e. if the name graph attribute is set.
From the second line, the attributes of the graph are listed, separated by a
comma. After the attribute names, the kind of the attribute -- graph
(‘g’), vertex (‘v’) or edge (‘e’)
-- is denoted, and the type of the attribute as well, character
(‘c’), numeric (‘n’), logical
(‘l’), or other (‘x’).
As of igraph 0.4 str.igraph and print.igraph use the
max.print option, see options for details.
# NOT RUN {
g <- make_ring(10)
g
summary(g)
# }
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab