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The directed_graph gem is useful for modeling directed, acyclic, unweighted graphs. It provides methods to topologically sort graphs, find the shortest path between two vertices, and render the graphs and json for client-side graphing.
The following graph will be used to demonstrate the functionality of the directed_graph gem.
The Graph
class should be instantiated with an array of edges:
# create the vertices
@root = Vertex.new(name: "root")
@a = Vertex.new(name: "a")
@b = Vertex.new(name: "b")
@c = Vertex.new(name: "c")
@d = Vertex.new(name: "d")
@e = Vertex.new(name: "e")
# The first argument is the origin_vertex
# and the second is the destination_vertex
@ra = Edge.new(origin_vertex: @root, destination_vertex: @a)
@ab = Edge.new(origin_vertex: @a, destination_vertex: @b)
@bc = Edge.new(origin_vertex: @b, destination_vertex: @c)
@bd = Edge.new(origin_vertex: @b, destination_vertex: @d)
@ae = Edge.new(origin_vertex: @a, destination_vertex: @e)
@de = Edge.new(origin_vertex: @d, destination_vertex: @e)
@edges = [@ra, @ab, @bc, @bd, @ae, @de]
@graph = Graph.new(@edges)
The @graph
object can be used to get a topological sorted array of the vertices:
@graph.sorted_vertices # [@root, @a, @b, @d, @e, @c]
Here is an awesome blog post on topological sorting in Ruby with the TSort
module.
The @graph
object can also be used to calculate the shortest path between two vertices:
@graph.shortest_path(@root, @e) # [@root, @a, @e]
@graph.shortest_path(@root, Vertex.new(name: "blah")) # nil because the "blah" vertex doesn't exist
@graph.shortest_path(@d, @a) # nil because the graph is directed and can't be traversed in the wrong direction
The @graph
object can be used to calculate the longest path between two vertices:
@graph.longest_path(@root, @e) # [@root, @a, @b, @d, @e]
@graph.longest_path(@a, @c) # [@a, @b, @c]
@graph.longest_path(@d, @a) # returns [] when the path doesn't exist
The @graph
object can be used to generate a graphml file
require 'color-generator'
generator = ColorGenerator.new saturation: 0.3, lightness: 0.75
# Set the color and label of each vertex
#
@graph.vertices.each do |vertex|
color = generator.create_hex
label = vertex.name
vertex.data[:graphics] = {:fill=>["##{color}"], :label=>[label], :group=>color}
end
# Generate a graphml file
# Import this file into program like yEd to size nodes and layout graph
File.open("output.graphml", "w+") { |f| f.write(@graph.to_graphml())}
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'directed_graph'
Require the gem in your code:
require 'directed_graph'
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/MrPowers/directed_graph.
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
FAQs
Unknown package
We found that directed_graph demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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