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network (version 1.19.0)

network.dyadcount: Return the Number of (Possibly Directed) Dyads in a Network Object

Description

network.dyadcount returns the number of possible dyads within a network, removing those flagged as missing if desired. If the network is directed, directed dyads are counted accordingly.

Usage

# S3 method for network
network.dyadcount(x, na.omit = TRUE, ...)

Value

The number of dyads in the network

Arguments

x

an object of class network

na.omit

logical; omit edges with na==TRUE from the count?

...

possible additional arguments, used by other implementations

Author

Mark S. Handcock handcock@stat.washington.edu, skyebend

Details

The return value network.dyadcount is equal to the number of dyads, minus the number of NULL edges (and missing edges, if na.omit==TRUE). If x is directed, the number of directed dyads is returned. If the network allows loops, the number of possible entries on the diagnonal is added. Allthough the function does not give an error on multiplex networks or hypergraphs, the results probably don't make sense.

References

Butts, C. T. (2008). “network: a Package for Managing Relational Data in R.” Journal of Statistical Software, 24(2). tools:::Rd_expr_doi("10.18637/jss.v024.i02")

See Also

get.network.attribute, network.edgecount, is.directed

Examples

Run this code

#Create a directed network with three edges
m<-matrix(0,3,3)
m[1,2]<-1; m[2,3]<-1; m[3,1]<-1
g<-network(m)
network.dyadcount(g)==6                 #Verify the directed dyad count
g<-network(m|t(m),directed=FALSE)
network.dyadcount(g)==3                         #nC2 in undirected case

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