Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell98 |
A module defining a polymorphic data type for (simple, undirected) graphs, together with constructions of some common families of graphs, new from old constructions, and calculation of simple properties of graphs.
Synopsis
- set :: Ord b => [b] -> [b]
- powerset :: [a] -> [[a]]
- data Graph a = G [a] [[a]]
- nf :: Ord a => Graph a -> Graph a
- isSetSystem :: Ord a => [a] -> [[a]] -> Bool
- isGraph :: Ord a => [a] -> [[a]] -> Bool
- graph :: Ord t => ([t], [[t]]) -> Graph t
- toGraph :: Ord a => ([a], [[a]]) -> Graph a
- vertices :: Graph a -> [a]
- edges :: Graph a -> [[a]]
- incidenceMatrix :: (Eq a1, Num a2) => Graph a1 -> [[a2]]
- fromIncidenceMatrix :: (Num t, Enum t, Ord t, Num a, Eq a) => [[a]] -> Graph t
- adjacencyMatrix :: (Num a2, Ord a1) => Graph a1 -> [[a2]]
- fromAdjacencyMatrix :: (Eq a, Num a) => [[a]] -> Graph Int
- nullGraph :: Integral t => t -> Graph t
- nullGraph' :: Graph Int
- c :: Integral t => t -> Graph t
- k :: Integral t => t -> Graph t
- kb :: Integral t => t -> t -> Graph t
- kb' :: Integral t => t -> t -> Graph (Either t t)
- q :: Integral t => Int -> Graph t
- q' :: Integral t => Int -> Graph [t]
- tetrahedron :: Graph Integer
- cube :: Graph Integer
- octahedron :: Graph Integer
- dodecahedron :: Graph Integer
- icosahedron :: Graph Integer
- prism :: Int -> Graph (Int, Int)
- to1n :: (Ord t, Num t, Enum t, Ord a) => Graph a -> Graph t
- fromDigits :: Integral a => Graph [a] -> Graph a
- fromBinary :: Integral a => Graph [a] -> Graph a
- petersen :: Graph [Integer]
- complement :: Ord t => Graph t -> Graph t
- restriction :: Eq a => Graph a -> [a] -> Graph a
- inducedSubgraph :: Eq a => Graph a -> [a] -> Graph a
- lineGraph :: (Num t, Enum t, Ord t, Ord a) => Graph a -> Graph t
- lineGraph' :: Ord a => Graph a -> Graph [a]
- cartProd :: (Ord a1, Ord a2) => Graph a2 -> Graph a1 -> Graph (a2, a1)
- order :: Graph a -> Int
- size :: Graph a -> Int
- valency :: Eq a => Graph a -> a -> Int
- valencies :: Eq a => Graph a -> [(Int, Int)]
- valencyPartition :: Eq b => Graph b -> [[b]]
- regularParam :: Eq a => Graph a -> Maybe Int
- isRegular :: Eq t => Graph t -> Bool
- isCubic :: Eq t => Graph t -> Bool
- nbrs :: Eq a => Graph a -> a -> [a]
- findPaths :: Eq a => Graph a -> a -> a -> [[a]]
- distance :: Eq a => Graph a -> a -> a -> Int
- diameter :: Ord t => Graph t -> Int
- findCycles :: Eq a => Graph a -> a -> [[a]]
- girth :: Eq t => Graph t -> Int
- distancePartition :: Ord a => Graph a -> a -> [[a]]
- distancePartitionS :: Ord a => [a] -> Set [a] -> a -> [[a]]
- component :: Ord a => Graph a -> a -> [a]
- isConnected :: Ord t => Graph t -> Bool
- components :: Ord a => Graph a -> [[a]]
- j :: Int -> Int -> Int -> Graph [Int]
- kneser :: Int -> Int -> Graph [Int]
- johnson :: Int -> Int -> Graph [Int]
- bipartiteKneser :: Int -> Int -> Graph (Either [Int] [Int])
- desargues1 :: Graph (Either [Int] [Int])
- gp :: Integral b => b -> b -> Graph (Either b b)
- petersen2 :: Graph (Either Integer Integer)
- prism' :: Integral b => b -> Graph (Either b b)
- durer :: Graph (Either Integer Integer)
- mobiusKantor :: Graph (Either Integer Integer)
- dodecahedron2 :: Graph (Either Integer Integer)
- desargues2 :: Graph (Either Integer Integer)
Documentation
Datatype for graphs, represented as a list of vertices and a list of edges. For most purposes, graphs are required to be in normal form. A graph G vs es is in normal form if (i) vs is in ascending order without duplicates, (ii) es is in ascending order without duplicates, (iii) each e in es is a 2-element list [x,y], x<y
G [a] [[a]] |
nf :: Ord a => Graph a -> Graph a Source #
Convert a graph to normal form. The input is assumed to be a valid graph apart from order
isSetSystem :: Ord a => [a] -> [[a]] -> Bool Source #
graph :: Ord t => ([t], [[t]]) -> Graph t Source #
Safe constructor for graph from lists of vertices and edges. graph (vs,es) checks that vs and es are valid before returning the graph.
nullGraph :: Integral t => t -> Graph t Source #
The null graph on n vertices is the graph with no edges
nullGraph' :: Graph Int Source #
The null graph, with no vertices or edges
kb :: Integral t => t -> t -> Graph t Source #
kb m n is the complete bipartite graph on m and n vertices
kb' :: Integral t => t -> t -> Graph (Either t t) Source #
kb' m n is the complete bipartite graph on m left and n right vertices
fromDigits :: Integral a => Graph [a] -> Graph a Source #
Given a graph with vertices which are lists of small integers, eg [1,2,3], return a graph with vertices which are the numbers obtained by interpreting these as digits, eg 123. The caller is responsible for ensuring that this makes sense (eg that the small integers are all < 10)
fromBinary :: Integral a => Graph [a] -> Graph a Source #
Given a graph with vertices which are lists of 0s and 1s, return a graph with vertices which are the numbers obtained by interpreting these as binary digits. For example, [1,1,0] -> 6.
restriction :: Eq a => Graph a -> [a] -> Graph a Source #
The restriction of a graph to a subset of the vertices
valencyPartition :: Eq b => Graph b -> [[b]] Source #
isRegular :: Eq t => Graph t -> Bool Source #
A graph is regular if all vertices have the same valency (degree)
distance :: Eq a => Graph a -> a -> a -> Int Source #
Within a graph G, the distance d(u,v) between vertices u, v is length of the shortest path from u to v
diameter :: Ord t => Graph t -> Int Source #
The diameter of a graph is maximum distance between two distinct vertices
findCycles :: Eq a => Graph a -> a -> [[a]] Source #
girth :: Eq t => Graph t -> Int Source #
The girth of a graph is the size of the smallest cycle that it contains. Note: If the graph contains no cycles, we return -1, representing infinity.
distancePartition :: Ord a => Graph a -> a -> [[a]] Source #
distancePartitionS :: Ord a => [a] -> Set [a] -> a -> [[a]] Source #
components :: Ord a => Graph a -> [[a]] Source #