| print.igraph {igraph} | R Documentation |
These functions attempt to print a graph to the terminal in a human readable form.
## S3 method for class 'igraph':
print(x,
graph.attributes=igraph.par("print.graph.attributes"),
vertex.attributes=igraph.par("print.vertex.attributes"),
edge.attributes=igraph.par("print.edge.attributes"),
names=TRUE,
...)
## S3 method for class 'bgraph':
print(x,
...)
## S3 method for class 'igraph':
summary(object, ...)
x |
The graph to print. |
graph.attributes |
Logical constant, whether to print graph attributes. |
vertex.attributes |
Logical constant, whether to print vertex attributes. |
edge.attributes |
Logical constant, whether to print edge attributes. |
names |
Logical constant, whether to print symbolic vertex names
(ie. the name vertex attribute) or vertex ids. |
object |
The graph of which the summary will be printed. |
... |
Additional agruments, print.bgraph passes these to
print.igraph. |
summary.igraph prints the number of vertices, edges and whether the
graph is directed.
print.igraph prints the same information, aand also lists
the edges, and optionally graph, vertex and/or edge attributes.
As of igraph 0.4 print.igraph uses the max.print option,
see options for details.
print.bgraph prints a bgraph object, a graph together
with its cohesive block hierarchy, see
cohesive.blocks for details.
All these functions return the graph invisibly.
Gabor Csardi csardi@rmki.kfki.hu
g <- graph.ring(10) g summary(g)