The S-representation of a graph is a list of (vertex-neighbours)
pairs, where the pairs are in standard order (as produced by keysort)
and the neighbours of each vertex are also in standard order (as
produced by sort). This form is convenient for many calculations.
Adapted to support some of the functionality of the SICStus ugraphs
library by Vitor Santos Costa.
- vertices(+Graph,
-Vertices)
-
Unify Vertices with all vertices appearing in Graph.
Example:
?- vertices([1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],4-[5],5-[]], L).
L = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
- [det]vertices_edges_to_ugraph(+Vertices,
+Edges, -UGraph)
-
Create a UGraph from Vertices and edges. Given a
graph with a set of Vertices and a set of Edges,
Graph must unify with the corresponding S-representation. Note that the
vertices without edges will appear in Vertices but not in Edges.
Moreover, it is sufficient for a vertice to appear in Edges.
?- vertices_edges_to_ugraph([],[1-3,2-4,4-5,1-5], L).
L = [1-[3,5], 2-[4], 3-[], 4-[5], 5-[]]
In this case all vertices are defined implicitly. The next example
shows three unconnected vertices:
?- vertices_edges_to_ugraph([6,7,8],[1-3,2-4,4-5,1-5], L).
L = [1-[3,5], 2-[4], 3-[], 4-[5], 5-[], 6-[], 7-[], 8-[]]
- add_vertices(+Graph,
+Vertices, -NewGraph)
-
Unify NewGraph with a new graph obtained by adding the list
of
Vertices to Graph. Example:
?- add_vertices([1-[3,5],2-[]], [0,1,2,9], NG).
NG = [0-[], 1-[3,5], 2-[], 9-[]]
- [det]del_vertices(+Graph,
+Vertices, -NewGraph)
-
Unify NewGraph with a new graph obtained by deleting the list
of
Vertices and all the edges that start from or go to a vertex
in
Vertices to the Graph. Example:
?- del_vertices([1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],4-[5],5-[],6-[],7-[2,6],8-[]],
[2,1],
NL).
NL = [3-[],4-[5],5-[],6-[],7-[6],8-[]]
- Compatibility
-
Upto 5.6.48 the argument order was (+Vertices, +Graph,
-NewGraph). Both YAP and SWI-Prolog have changed the argument
order for compatibility with recent SICStus as well as consistency with del_edges/3.
- add_edges(+Graph,
+Edges, -NewGraph)
-
Unify NewGraph with a new graph obtained by adding the list
of Edges to Graph. Example:
?- add_edges([1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],4-[5],
5-[],6-[],7-[],8-[]],
[1-6,2-3,3-2,5-7,3-2,4-5],
NL).
NL = [1-[3,5,6], 2-[3,4], 3-[2], 4-[5],
5-[7], 6-[], 7-[], 8-[]]
- ugraph_union(+Graph1,
+Graph2, -NewGraph)
-
NewGraph is the union of Graph1 and Graph2.
Example:
?- ugraph_union([1-[2],2-[3]],[2-[4],3-[1,2,4]],L).
L = [1-[2], 2-[3,4], 3-[1,2,4]]
- del_edges(+Graph,
+Edges, -NewGraph)
-
Unify NewGraph with a new graph obtained by removing the list
of
Edges from Graph. Notice that no vertices are
deleted. Example:
?- del_edges([1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],4-[5],5-[],6-[],7-[],8-[]],
[1-6,2-3,3-2,5-7,3-2,4-5,1-3],
NL).
NL = [1-[5],2-[4],3-[],4-[],5-[],6-[],7-[],8-[]]
- edges(+Graph,
-Edges)
-
Unify Edges with all edges appearing in Graph.
Example:
?- edges([1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],4-[5],5-[]], L).
L = [1-3, 1-5, 2-4, 4-5]
- transitive_closure(+Graph,
-Closure)
-
Generate the graph Closure as the transitive closure of Graph.
Example:
?- transitive_closure([1-[2,3],2-[4,5],4-[6]],L).
L = [1-[2,3,4,5,6], 2-[4,5,6], 4-[6]]
- [det]transpose_ugraph(Graph,
NewGraph)
-
Unify NewGraph with a new graph obtained from Graph
by replacing all edges of the form V1-V2 by edges of the form V2-V1. The
cost is O(
|
V|
*log(|
V|
)).
Notice that an undirected graph is its own transpose. Example:
?- transpose([1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],4-[5],
5-[],6-[],7-[],8-[]], NL).
NL = [1-[],2-[],3-[1],4-[2],5-[1,4],6-[],7-[],8-[]]
- Compatibility
-
This predicate used to be known as transpose/2.
Following SICStus 4, we reserve transpose/2
for matrix transposition and renamed ugraph transposition to
transpose_ugraph/2.
- compose(+LeftGraph,
+RightGraph, -NewGraph)
-
Compose NewGraph by connecting the drains of LeftGraph
to the
sources of RightGraph. Example:
?- compose([1-[2],2-[3]],[2-[4],3-[1,2,4]],L).
L = [1-[4], 2-[1,2,4], 3-[]]
- [semidet]top_sort(+Graph,
-Sorted)
- [semidet]top_sort(+Graph,
-Sorted, ?Tail)
-
Sorted is a topological sorted list of nodes in Graph.
A toplogical sort is possible if the graph is connected and acyclic. In
the example we show how topological sorting works for a linear graph:
?- top_sort([1-[2], 2-[3], 3-[]], L).
L = [1, 2, 3]
The predicate top_sort/3
is a difference list version of
top_sort/2.
- [det]neighbors(+Vertex,
+Graph, -Neigbours)
- [det]neighbours(+Vertex,
+Graph, -Neigbours)
-
Neigbours is a sorted list of the neighbours of Vertex
in Graph. Example:
?- neighbours(4,[1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],
4-[1,2,7,5],5-[],6-[],7-[],8-[]], NL).
NL = [1,2,7,5]
- [det]connect_ugraph(+UGraphIn,
-Start, -UGraphOut)
-
Adds Start as an additional vertex that is connected to all
vertices in UGraphIn. This can be used to create an
topological sort for a not connected graph. Start is before
any vertex in UGraphIn in the standard order of terms. No
vertex in UGraphIn can be a variable.
Can be used to order a not-connected graph as follows:
top_sort_unconnected(Graph, Vertices) :-
( top_sort(Graph, Vertices)
-> true
; connect_ugraph(Graph, Start, Connected),
top_sort(Connected, Ordered0),
Ordered0 = [Start|Vertices]
).
- complement(+UGraphIn,
-UGraphOut)
-
UGraphOut is a ugraph with an edge between all vertices that
are
not connected in UGraphIn and all edges from UGraphIn
removed. Example:
?- complement([1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],
4-[1,2,7,5],5-[],6-[],7-[],8-[]], NL).
NL = [1-[2,4,6,7,8],2-[1,3,5,6,7,8],3-[1,2,4,5,6,7,8],
4-[3,5,6,8],5-[1,2,3,4,6,7,8],6-[1,2,3,4,5,7,8],
7-[1,2,3,4,5,6,8],8-[1,2,3,4,5,6,7]]
- To be done
-
Simple two-step algorithm. You could be smarter, I suppose.
- reachable(+Vertex,
+UGraph, -Vertices)
-
True when Vertices is an ordered set of vertices reachable in
UGraph, including Vertex. Example:
?- reachable(1,[1-[3,5],2-[4],3-[],4-[5],5-[]],V).
V = [1, 3, 5]