Copyright | (c) Ivan Lazar Miljenovic |
---|---|
License | 3-Clause BSD-style |
Maintainer | Ivan.Miljenovic@gmail.com |
Safe Haskell | None |
Language | Haskell2010 |
It is sometimes useful to be able to manipulate a Dot graph as an
actual graph. This representation lets you do so, using an
inductive approach based upon that from FGL (note that DotGraph
is not an instance of the FGL classes due to having the wrong
kind). Note, however, that the API is not as complete as proper
graph implementations.
For purposes of manipulation, all edges are found in the root graph
and not in a cluster; as such, having EdgeAttrs
in a cluster's
GlobalAttributes
is redundant.
Printing is achieved via Data.GraphViz.Types.Canonical (using
toCanonical
) and parsing via Data.GraphViz.Types.Generalised
(so any piece of Dot code can be parsed in).
This representation doesn't allow non-cluster sub-graphs. Also, all
clusters must have a unique identifier. For those functions (with
the exception of DotRepr
methods) that take or return a "Maybe
GraphID
", a value of "Nothing
" refers to the root graph; "Just
clust
" refers to the cluster with the identifier "clust
".
You would not typically explicitly create these values, instead
converting existing Dot graphs (via fromDotRepr
). However, one
way of constructing the sample graph would be:
setID (Str "G") . setStrictness False . setIsDirected True . setClusterAttributes (Int 0) [GraphAttrs [style filled, color LightGray, textLabel "process #1"], NodeAttrs [style filled, color White]] . setClusterAttributes (Int 1) [GraphAttrs [textLabel "process #2", color Blue], NodeAttrs [style filled]] $ composeList [ Cntxt "a0" (Just $ Int 0) [] [("a3",[]),("start",[])] [("a1",[])] , Cntxt "a1" (Just $ Int 0) [] [] [("a2",[]),("b3",[])] , Cntxt "a2" (Just $ Int 0) [] [] [("a3",[])] , Cntxt "a3" (Just $ Int 0) [] [("b2",[])] [("end",[])] , Cntxt "b0" (Just $ Int 1) [] [("start",[])] [("b1",[])] , Cntxt "b1" (Just $ Int 1) [] [] [("b2",[])] , Cntxt "b2" (Just $ Int 1) [] [] [("b3",[])] , Cntxt "b3" (Just $ Int 1) [] [] [("end",[])] , Cntxt "end" Nothing [shape MSquare] [] [] , Cntxt "start" Nothing [shape MDiamond] [] []]
Synopsis
- data DotGraph n
- data GraphID
- data Context n = Cntxt {
- node :: !n
- inCluster :: !(Maybe GraphID)
- attributes :: !Attributes
- predecessors :: ![(n, Attributes)]
- successors :: ![(n, Attributes)]
- toCanonical :: DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- unsafeFromCanonical :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- fromDotRepr :: DotRepr dg n => dg n -> DotGraph n
- isEmpty :: DotGraph n -> Bool
- hasClusters :: DotGraph n -> Bool
- isEmptyGraph :: DotGraph n -> Bool
- graphAttributes :: DotGraph n -> [GlobalAttributes]
- parentOf :: DotGraph n -> GraphID -> Maybe GraphID
- clusterAttributes :: DotGraph n -> GraphID -> [GlobalAttributes]
- foundInCluster :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> Maybe GraphID
- attributesOf :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> Attributes
- predecessorsOf :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> [DotEdge n]
- successorsOf :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> [DotEdge n]
- adjacentTo :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> [DotEdge n]
- adjacent :: Context n -> [DotEdge n]
- mkGraph :: Ord n => [DotNode n] -> [DotEdge n] -> DotGraph n
- emptyGraph :: DotGraph n
- (&) :: Ord n => Context n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- composeList :: Ord n => [Context n] -> DotGraph n
- addNode :: Ord n => n -> Maybe GraphID -> Attributes -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- data DotNode n = DotNode {
- nodeID :: n
- nodeAttributes :: Attributes
- addDotNode :: Ord n => DotNode n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- addEdge :: Ord n => n -> n -> Attributes -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- data DotEdge n = DotEdge {
- fromNode :: n
- toNode :: n
- edgeAttributes :: Attributes
- addDotEdge :: Ord n => DotEdge n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- addCluster :: GraphID -> Maybe GraphID -> [GlobalAttributes] -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- setClusterParent :: GraphID -> Maybe GraphID -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- setClusterAttributes :: GraphID -> [GlobalAttributes] -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- decompose :: Ord n => n -> DotGraph n -> Maybe (Context n, DotGraph n)
- decomposeAny :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> Maybe (Context n, DotGraph n)
- decomposeList :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> [Context n]
- deleteNode :: Ord n => n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- deleteAllEdges :: Ord n => n -> n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- deleteEdge :: Ord n => n -> n -> Attributes -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- deleteDotEdge :: Ord n => DotEdge n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- deleteCluster :: GraphID -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
- removeEmptyClusters :: DotGraph n -> DotGraph n
Documentation
A Dot graph that allows graph operations on it.
Instances
A polymorphic type that covers all possible ID values allowed by
Dot syntax. Note that whilst the ParseDot
and PrintDot
instances for String
will properly take care of the special
cases for numbers, they are treated differently here.
The decomposition of a node from a dot graph. Any loops should
be found in successors
rather than predecessors
. Note also
that these are created/consumed as if for directed graphs.
Cntxt | |
|
Conversions
toCanonical :: DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Convert this DotGraph into canonical form. All edges are found in the outer graph rather than in clusters.
unsafeFromCanonical :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Convert a canonical Dot graph to a graph-based one. This assumes
that the canonical graph is the same format as returned by
toCanonical
. The "unsafeness" is that:
- All clusters must have a unique identifier (
unAnonymise
can be used to make sure all clusters have an identifier, but it doesn't ensure uniqueness). - All nodes are assumed to be explicitly listed precisely once.
- Only edges found in the root graph are considered.
If this isn't the case, use fromCanonical
instead.
The graphToDot
function from Data.GraphViz produces output
suitable for this function (assuming all clusters are provided
with a unique identifier); graphElemsToDot
is suitable if all
nodes are specified in the input list (rather than just the
edges).
fromDotRepr :: DotRepr dg n => dg n -> DotGraph n Source #
Convert any existing DotRepr instance to a DotGraph
.
Graph information
hasClusters :: DotGraph n -> Bool Source #
Does this graph have any clusters?
isEmptyGraph :: DotGraph n -> Bool Source #
Determine if this graph has nodes or clusters.
graphAttributes :: DotGraph n -> [GlobalAttributes] Source #
parentOf :: DotGraph n -> GraphID -> Maybe GraphID Source #
Which cluster (or the root graph) is this cluster in?
clusterAttributes :: DotGraph n -> GraphID -> [GlobalAttributes] Source #
foundInCluster :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> Maybe GraphID Source #
Return the ID for the cluster the node is in.
attributesOf :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> Attributes Source #
Return the attributes for the node.
predecessorsOf :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> [DotEdge n] Source #
Predecessor edges for the specified node. For undirected graphs
equivalent to adjacentTo
.
successorsOf :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> n -> [DotEdge n] Source #
Successor edges for the specified node. For undirected graphs
equivalent to adjacentTo
.
Graph construction
mkGraph :: Ord n => [DotNode n] -> [DotEdge n] -> DotGraph n Source #
Create a graph with no clusters.
emptyGraph :: DotGraph n Source #
(&) :: Ord n => Context n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n infixr 5 Source #
Merge the Context
into the graph. Assumes that the specified
node is not in the graph but that all endpoints in the
successors
and predecessors
(with the exception of loops)
are. If the cluster is not present in the graph, then it will be
added with no attributes with a parent of the root graph.
Note that &
and
are not quite inverses, as this
function will add in the cluster if it does not yet exist in the
graph, but decompose
decompose
will not delete it.
composeList :: Ord n => [Context n] -> DotGraph n Source #
Recursively merge the list of contexts.
composeList = foldr (&) emptyGraph
:: Ord n | |
=> n | |
-> Maybe GraphID | The cluster the node can be found in
( |
-> Attributes | |
-> DotGraph n | |
-> DotGraph n |
Add a node to the current graph. Merges attributes and edges if the node already exists in the graph.
If the specified cluster does not yet exist in the graph, then it will be added (as a sub-graph of the overall graph and no attributes).
A node in DotGraph
.
DotNode | |
|
Instances
Functor DotNode Source # | |
Eq n => Eq (DotNode n) Source # | |
Ord n => Ord (DotNode n) Source # | |
Defined in Data.GraphViz.Types.Internal.Common | |
Read n => Read (DotNode n) Source # | |
Show n => Show (DotNode n) Source # | |
ParseDot n => ParseDot (DotNode n) Source # | |
PrintDot n => PrintDot (DotNode n) Source # | |
addDotNode :: Ord n => DotNode n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
A variant of addNode
that takes in a DotNode (not in a
cluster).
addEdge :: Ord n => n -> n -> Attributes -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Add the specified edge to the graph; assumes both node values are already present in the graph. If the graph is undirected then the order of nodes doesn't matter.
An edge in DotGraph
.
DotEdge | |
|
Instances
Functor DotEdge Source # | |
Eq n => Eq (DotEdge n) Source # | |
Ord n => Ord (DotEdge n) Source # | |
Defined in Data.GraphViz.Types.Internal.Common | |
Read n => Read (DotEdge n) Source # | |
Show n => Show (DotEdge n) Source # | |
ParseDot n => ParseDot (DotEdge n) Source # | |
PrintDot n => PrintDot (DotEdge n) Source # | |
:: GraphID | The identifier for this cluster. |
-> Maybe GraphID | The parent of this cluster
( |
-> [GlobalAttributes] | |
-> DotGraph n | |
-> DotGraph n |
Add a new cluster to the graph; throws an error if the cluster already exists. Assumes that it doesn't match the identifier of the overall graph. If the parent cluster doesn't already exist in the graph then it will be added.
setClusterParent :: GraphID -> Maybe GraphID -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Specify the parent of the cluster; adds both in if not already present.
setClusterAttributes :: GraphID -> [GlobalAttributes] -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Specify the attributes of the cluster; adds it if not already present.
Graph deconstruction
decompose :: Ord n => n -> DotGraph n -> Maybe (Context n, DotGraph n) Source #
A partial inverse of
, in that if a node exists in a graph
then it will be decomposed, but will not remove the cluster that
it was in even if it was the only node in that cluster.&
decomposeAny :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> Maybe (Context n, DotGraph n) Source #
As with decompose
, but do not specify which node to
decompose.
decomposeList :: Ord n => DotGraph n -> [Context n] Source #
Recursively decompose the Dot graph into a list of contexts such
that if (c:cs) = decomposeList dg
, then dg = c &
.composeList
cs
Note that all global attributes are lost, so this is not suitable for representing a Dot graph on its own.
deleteNode :: Ord n => n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Delete the specified node from the graph; returns the original graph if that node isn't present.
deleteAllEdges :: Ord n => n -> n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Delete all edges between the two nodes; returns the original graph if there are no edges.
deleteEdge :: Ord n => n -> n -> Attributes -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Deletes the specified edge from the DotGraph (note: for unordered graphs both orientations are considered).
deleteDotEdge :: Ord n => DotEdge n -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
As with deleteEdge
but takes a DotEdge
rather than individual
values.
deleteCluster :: GraphID -> DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Delete the specified cluster, and makes any clusters or nodes within it be in its root cluster (or the overall graph if required).
removeEmptyClusters :: DotGraph n -> DotGraph n Source #
Remove clusters with no sub-clusters and no nodes within them.