.. _networkx: ############################ rustworkx for NetworkX users ############################ This is an introductory guide for existing `NetworkX `__ users on how to use rustworkx, how it differs from NetworkX, and key differences to keep in mind. Some Key Differences ==================== rustworkx (as the name implies) was inspired by networkx and the goal of the project is to provide a similar level of functionality and utility to what networkx offers but with much faster performance. However, because of limitations in the boundary between rust and python, different design decisions, and other differences the libraries are not identical. The biggest difference to keep in mind is networkx is a very dynamic in how it can be used. It allows you to treat a graph object associatively (like a python dictionary) and interact with the graph using the objects you're putting on the graph. For example:: import networkx as nx graph = nx.MultiDiGraph() graph.add_node('my_node_a') graph.add_node('my_node_b') graph.add_edge('my_node_a', 'my_node_b') While rustworkx being written in Rust puts more constraints on how you interact with graph objects. With rustworkx you can still attach any Python object on the a graph but each node and edge is assigned an integer index. That index must be used for accessing nodes and edges on the graph. In rustworkx the above example would be something like:: import rustworkx as rx graph = rx.PyDiGraph() node_a = graph.add_node('my_node_a') node_b = graph.add_node('my_node_b') graph.add_edge(node_a, node_b, None) where ``node_a == 0`` and ``node_b == 1``. These node indices can be used with a graph object to access the objects set as the payload object via the python mapping protocol (**not** the sequence protocol because the indices are not guaranteed to be a sequence after nodes or edges are removed from a graph). Continuing from the above rustworkx example:: assert 'my_node_a' == graph[node_a] assert 'my_node_b' == graph[node_b] The use of integer indices for everything is normally the biggest difference that existing networkx users have to adapt to when migrating to rustworkx. Similarly when there are algorithm functions that operate on a node or edge data, callback functions are used in rustworkx to return statically typed data from node or edge payloads to use for various algorithms. In networkx this is typically done using named attributes of nodes or edges (the typical example of a node or edge attribute named ``weight`` is used by default for functions that need a numerical weight). For example, in networkx:: import networkx as nx graph = nx.MultiDiGraph() graph.add_edges_from([(0, 1, {'weight': 1}), (0, 2, {'weight': 2}), (1, 3, {'weight': 2}), (3, 0, {'weight': 3})]) dist_matrix = nx.floyd_warshall_numpy(graph, weight='weight') while in rustworkx you would use:: import rustworkx as rx graph = rx.PyDiGraph() graph.extend_from weighted_edge_list( [(0, 1, {'weight': 1}), (0, 2, {'weight': 2}), (1, 3, {'weight': 2}), (3, 0, {'weight': 3})]) dist_matrix = rx.digraph_floyd_warshall_numpy( graph, weight_fn=lambda edge: edge[weight]) or more concisely:: import rustworkx as rx graph = rx.PyDiGraph() graph.extend_from weighted_edge_list( [(0, 1, 1), (0, 2, 2), (1, 3, 2), (3, 0, 3)]) dist_matrix = rx.digraph_floyd_warshall_numpy(graph, weight_fn=lambda edge: edge) The other large difference to keep in mind is that many functions in rustworkx are explicitly typed. This means that they either always return or accept either a :class:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph` or a :class:`~rustworkx.PyGraph` but not both. Generally, functions prefixed with `graph_*` and `digraph_*` explicitly typed. Explicitly typed functions also indicate their type on the docstrings. This is different from networkx where everything is pretty much dynamically typed and you can pass a graph object to any function and it will work as expected (unless it isn't supported and then it will raise an exception). Graph Data and Attributes ========================= Nodes ----- In networkx a node can be any hashable python object. That object is then used to access or refer to a node. Additionally, you can set optional attributes on a node. This is described in more detail below. In rustworkx any python object (hashable or not) can be used as a node, however nodes can only be accessed by an integer node index (which is returned by any function adding a node). There are no optional attributes for nodes. If this is required that is expected to be added to the node's data payload. Edges ----- Edges in networkx are accessible by the tuple of the nodes the edge is between. Edges only have optional attributes (as described below) and no other object payload. In rustworkx any python object can be an edge and have a unique integer index assigned to it, just like nodes. However, edges are in most functions/methods referenced by the tuple of the indices of the nodes the edge is between instead of the edge's index. Attributes ---------- networkx has a concept of `graph `__, `node `__, and `edge attributes `__ in addition to the hashable object used for a node's payload. Retworkx has graph attributes similar to NetworkX however instead of being treated like a dictionary on the graph object itself they're accessible from a dedicated :class:`~.PyGraph.attrs` attribute. This attribute can be any Python object so you can use it to have different containers than a dictionary. For example, something like:: import networkx as nx graph = nx.Graph(day="Friday") graph['day'] = "Monday" can be done in rustworkx with:: import rustworkx as rx graph = rx.PyGraph(attrs=dict(day="Friday")) graph.attrs['day'] = "Monday" Additionally you could use a custom class with rustworkx like:: class Day: def __init__(self, day): self.day = day graph = rx.PyGraph(attrs=Day("Friday")) graph.attrs = Day("Monday") But for nodes and edges rustworkx has no analogous concept. Instead, the payloads for nodes and edges are any python object (hashable or not). This enables you to build similar structures to the attributes concept, but also use alternative structures specific to your use case. For example, something like:: import networkx as nx graph = nx.Graph() graph.add_node(1, time='5pm') graph.add_nodes_from([3], time='2pm') graph.nodes[1]['room'] = 714 can be accomplished by using a ``dict`` for node weights:: import rustworkx as rx graph = rx.PyGraph() node_a = graph.add_node({'time': '5pm'}) node_b = graph.add_nodes_from([{'time': '2pm'}]) graph[node_a]['room'] = 714 Examining elements of a graph ----------------------------- networkx provides 4 attributes on graph objects ``nodes``, ``edges``, ``adj``, and ``degree`` which act as set like views for the nodes, edges, neighbors, and degrees of nodes respectively. These properties provide a real time view into the different properties of the graphs and provide additional methods on those attributes for looking at graph properties in different ways. rustworkx doesn't offer views, but instead provides different accessor methods that return copies of the analogous data. There are different functions/methods that offer different views on that data. For example, :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.edge_list` is analogous to networkx's ``edges`` view and :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.weighted_edge_list` is equivalent to networkx's ``edges(data=True)``. Additionally, since everything in rustworkx is integer indexed, to access node data the :class:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph` and :class:`~rustworkx.PyGraph` classes implement the python mapping protocol so you can access node's data using a node's index. API Equivalents =============== Class Constructors ------------------ .. list-table:: :header-rows: 1 * - networkx - rustworkx - Notes * - ``Graph()`` - :class:`PyGraph(multigraph=False) ` - Only in multigraph flag added in rustworkx>= 0.8.0 prior releases always allow multiple edges * - ``DiGraph()`` - :class:`PyDiGraph(multigraph=False) ` - Only in multigraph flag added in rustworkx>= 0.8.0 prior releases always allow multiple edges * - ``MultiGraph()`` - :class:`PyGraph() ` - * - ``MultiDiGraph()`` - :class:`PyDiGraph() ` - The other thing to note here is that rustworkx does not allow initialization of a graph when the constructor is called. You will need to call an appropriate method of the object to add nodes or edges or use an alternative constructor method: .. list-table:: :header-rows: 1 * - networkx - rustworkx - Notes * - .. code-block:: Graph([(0, 1), (1, 0)]) - .. code-block:: graph = PyGraph() graph.extend_from_edge_list([(0, 1), (1, 0)]) - rustworkx input must be a list of 2-tuples, while networkx can be an iterator * - .. code-block:: Graph([(0, 1, {'weight': 2}), (1, 0, {'weight': 1})]) - .. code-block:: graph = PyGraph() graph.extend_from_edge_list([(0, 1, 2), (1, 0, 1)]) - rustworkx input must be a list of 3-tuples, while networkx can be an iterator * - .. code-block:: Graph(np.array([[0, 1, 1], [1, 0, 1], [1, 0, 1]])) - .. code-block:: PyGraph.from_adjacency_matrix(np.array([[0, 1, 1], [1, 0, 1], [1, 0, 1]], dtype=np.float64)) - rustworkx :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.from_adjacency_matrix` can only take a float dtype numpy array, you can use ``.astype(np.float64, copy=False)`` to adapt a non-float array. Graph Modifiers --------------- .. list-table:: :header-rows: 1 * - networkx - rustworkx - Notes * - ``add_node()`` - :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.add_node` - rustworkx returns a node index for the newly created node * - ``add_nodes_from`` - :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.add_nodes_from` - rustworkx requires the input to be a list of objects and will return a list of node indices for the newly created nodes * - ``add_edge`` - :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.add_edge` - rustworkx requires 3 parameters be used, the 2 node indices and the payload (networkx works with either 2 or 3) * - ``add_edges_from`` - :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.add_edges_from`, :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.add_edges_from_no_data`, :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.extend_from_edge_list`, :meth:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph.extend_from_weighted_edge_list` - rustworkx requires a list of either a 3 or 2 tuple (depending on whether weights/data are expected or not). The difference between the rustworkx ``extend_from*`` and ``add_edges_from*`` methods are that the ``extend_from*`` will create new nodes with a weight/data payload of ``None`` if any node indices are missing. (note the rustworkx version links to the :class:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph` version, but there are also equivalent :class:`~rustworkx.PyGraph` methods available) Matrix Converter Functions -------------------------- NetworkX has several functions for going back and forth between a NetworkX graph and matrices in other libraries. This includes ``to_numpy_matrix()``, ``to_numpy_array()``, ``to_numpy_recarray()``, ``to_scipy_sparse_matrix()``, ``to_pandas_adjacency()``, and ``adjacency_matrix()`` (which is equivalent to ``to_scipy_sparse_matrix()`` and returns a scipy csr sparse matrix of the adjacency matrix). However, in rustworkx there is **only** a :meth:`~rustworkx.adjacency_matrix` function (and it's per type variants :meth:`~rustworkx.digraph_adjacency_matrix` and :meth:`~rustworkx.graph_adjacency_matrix`) which will return a numpy array of the adjacency matrix (**not** a scipy csr sparse matrix like networkx's function). This function is equivalent to networkx's ``to_numpy_array()`` function. This difference with rustworkx is primarily because numpy exposes a public C interface which rustworkx can interface with directly, while the other libraries and types only expose Python APIs. Visualization Functions ----------------------- NetworkX provides a native drawer with a matplotlib drawer (the ``networkx_drawer*`` functions) and then functions to interface with ``pygraphviz`` and ``pydot`` to enable visualization with graphviz via those libraries (in addition to functions to serialize graphs in formats other graph visualization tools can use). NetworkX also provides several functions `layout functions `__ for generating different layouts that can be used for visualizing the graph. rustworkx has drawer functions with 2 visualization backends, matplotlib (:func:`~rustworkx.visualization.mpl_draw`) and graphviz (:func:`~rustworkx.visualization.graphviz_draw`). Unlike networkx the :func:`~rustworkx.visualization.graphviz_draw` will handle calling graphviz and generate an image file. For layout functions rustworkx has a similar variety of :ref:`layout-functions`, however it should be noted that rustworkx's functions are strictly 2 dimensional. The also return a :class:`~rustworkx.Pos2DMapping` custom return type which acts as read-only dictionary (which is different from networkx which returns a normal dictionary that can be modified). Matplotlib Drawers ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ The retwork function :func:`~rustworkx.visualization.mpl_draw` function is basically equivalent to the networkx function ``draw_networkx`` (it was actually originally forked from the networkx drawer). However, there are some key differences to keep in mind between the networkx and rustworkx matplotlib drawer. ``networkx.draw_networkx`` and ``rustworkx.mpl_draw`` differences: .. list-table:: :header-rows: 1 * - networkx - rustworkx - Notes * - ``nodelist`` - ``node_list`` - * - ``edgelist`` - ``edge_list`` - * - ``arrowsize`` - ``arrow_size`` - * - ``labels`` - ``labels`` - For ``networkx_drawer`` ``labels`` is a dict of nodes to their label, while rustworkx's ``mpl_drawer`` ``labels`` is a callback function that will be passed a node's data payload and expected to return the node's label * - ``networkx.draw_networkx_edge_labels()`` - ``edge_labels`` - NetworkX's ``networkx_drawer`` doesn't have an option for edge labels and instead adding labels is only exposed via a separate function ``draw_networkx_edge_labels()`` which requires the ``pos`` dictionary from the original visualization to be used. rustworkx's ``edge_labels`` kwarg takes a callback function that will be passed an edge's data payload and expected to return the label. .. _networkx_converter: Converting from a networkx graph ================================ If you're using a function or an external library that is already generating a networkx graph then you can use :func:`rustworkx.networkx_converter` to convert that networkx ``Graph`` object into an equivalent rustworkx :class:`~rustworkx.PyGraph` or :class:`~rustworkx.PyDiGraph` object. Note that networkx is **not** a dependency for rustworkx and you are responsible for installing networkx to use this function. Accordingly, there is not equivalent function provided to convert the reverse direction (because doing so would add an unwanted dependency on networkx, even an optional one) but writing such a function is straightforward, for example:: import networkx as nx import rustworkx as rx def convert_rustworkx_to_networkx(graph): """Convert a rustworkx PyGraph or PyDiGraph to a networkx graph.""" edge_list = [( graph[x[0]], graph[x[1]], {'weight': x[2]}) for x in graph.weighted_edge_list()] if isinstance(graph, rx.PyGraph): if graph.multigraph: return nx.MultiGraph(edge_list) else: return nx.Graph(edge_list) else: if graph.multigraph: return nx.MultiDiGraph(edge_list) else: return nx.DiGraph(edge_list) Functionality Gaps ================== networkx is a mature library that has a wide user base and extensive feature set, while rustworkx, by comparison, is a much younger library and is missing a lot of the features that networkx offers. If you encounter a feature that networkx offers which is missing from rustworkx that you would like to use please open an "Enhancement request" issue at: https://github.com/Qiskit/rustworkx/issues/new/choose Once an issue is opened we can prioritize working on adding an equivalent feature to rustworkx.