Sometimes it is useful to work with a standard representation of a graph, like an adjacency matrix.
as_adjacency_matrix(
graph,
type = c("both", "upper", "lower"),
attr = NULL,
edges = FALSE,
names = TRUE,
sparse = igraph_opt("sparsematrices")
)as_adj(
graph,
type = c("both", "upper", "lower"),
attr = NULL,
edges = FALSE,
names = TRUE,
sparse = igraph_opt("sparsematrices")
)
A vcount(graph)
by vcount(graph)
(usually) numeric
matrix.
The graph to convert.
Gives how to create the adjacency matrix for undirected graphs.
It is ignored for directed graphs. Possible values: upper
: the upper
right triangle of the matrix is used, lower
: the lower left triangle
of the matrix is used. both
: the whole matrix is used, a symmetric
matrix is returned.
Either NULL
or a character string giving an edge
attribute name. If NULL
a traditional adjacency matrix is returned.
If not NULL
then the values of the given edge attribute are included
in the adjacency matrix. If the graph has multiple edges, the edge attribute
of an arbitrarily chosen edge (for the multiple edges) is included. This
argument is ignored if edges
is TRUE
.
Note that this works only for certain attribute types. If the sparse
argumen is TRUE
, then the attribute must be either logical or
numeric. If the sparse
argument is FALSE
, then character is
also allowed. The reason for the difference is that the Matrix
package does not support character sparse matrices yet.
Logical scalar, whether to return the edge ids in the matrix. For non-existant edges zero is returned.
Logical constant, whether to assign row and column names
to the matrix. These are only assigned if the name
vertex attribute
is present in the graph.
Logical scalar, whether to create a sparse matrix. The
‘Matrix
’ package must be installed for creating sparse
matrices.
as_adjacency_matrix
returns the adjacency matrix of a graph, a
regular matrix if sparse
is FALSE
, or a sparse matrix, as
defined in the ‘Matrix
’ package, if sparse
if
TRUE
.
graph_from_adjacency_matrix
, read_graph
g <- sample_gnp(10, 2/10)
as_adjacency_matrix(g)
V(g)$name <- letters[1:vcount(g)]
as_adjacency_matrix(g)
E(g)$weight <- runif(ecount(g))
as_adjacency_matrix(g, attr="weight")
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