754 lines
25 KiB
Python
754 lines
25 KiB
Python
"""Functions for finding and manipulating cliques.
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Finding the largest clique in a graph is NP-complete problem, so most of
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these algorithms have an exponential running time; for more information,
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see the Wikipedia article on the clique problem [1]_.
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.. [1] clique problem:: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clique_problem
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"""
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from collections import defaultdict, deque
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from itertools import chain, combinations, islice
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import networkx as nx
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from networkx.utils import not_implemented_for
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__all__ = [
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"find_cliques",
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"find_cliques_recursive",
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"make_max_clique_graph",
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"make_clique_bipartite",
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"node_clique_number",
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"number_of_cliques",
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"enumerate_all_cliques",
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"max_weight_clique",
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]
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@not_implemented_for("directed")
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@nx._dispatch
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def enumerate_all_cliques(G):
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"""Returns all cliques in an undirected graph.
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This function returns an iterator over cliques, each of which is a
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list of nodes. The iteration is ordered by cardinality of the
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cliques: first all cliques of size one, then all cliques of size
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two, etc.
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Parameters
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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An undirected graph.
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Returns
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-------
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iterator
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An iterator over cliques, each of which is a list of nodes in
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`G`. The cliques are ordered according to size.
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Notes
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-----
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To obtain a list of all cliques, use
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`list(enumerate_all_cliques(G))`. However, be aware that in the
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worst-case, the length of this list can be exponential in the number
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of nodes in the graph (for example, when the graph is the complete
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graph). This function avoids storing all cliques in memory by only
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keeping current candidate node lists in memory during its search.
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The implementation is adapted from the algorithm by Zhang, et
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al. (2005) [1]_ to output all cliques discovered.
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This algorithm ignores self-loops and parallel edges, since cliques
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are not conventionally defined with such edges.
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References
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----------
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.. [1] Yun Zhang, Abu-Khzam, F.N., Baldwin, N.E., Chesler, E.J.,
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Langston, M.A., Samatova, N.F.,
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"Genome-Scale Computational Approaches to Memory-Intensive
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Applications in Systems Biology".
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*Supercomputing*, 2005. Proceedings of the ACM/IEEE SC 2005
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Conference, pp. 12, 12--18 Nov. 2005.
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<https://doi.org/10.1109/SC.2005.29>.
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"""
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index = {}
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nbrs = {}
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for u in G:
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index[u] = len(index)
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# Neighbors of u that appear after u in the iteration order of G.
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nbrs[u] = {v for v in G[u] if v not in index}
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queue = deque(([u], sorted(nbrs[u], key=index.__getitem__)) for u in G)
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# Loop invariants:
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# 1. len(base) is nondecreasing.
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# 2. (base + cnbrs) is sorted with respect to the iteration order of G.
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# 3. cnbrs is a set of common neighbors of nodes in base.
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while queue:
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base, cnbrs = map(list, queue.popleft())
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yield base
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for i, u in enumerate(cnbrs):
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# Use generators to reduce memory consumption.
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queue.append(
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(
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chain(base, [u]),
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filter(nbrs[u].__contains__, islice(cnbrs, i + 1, None)),
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)
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)
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@not_implemented_for("directed")
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@nx._dispatch
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def find_cliques(G, nodes=None):
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"""Returns all maximal cliques in an undirected graph.
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For each node *n*, a *maximal clique for n* is a largest complete
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subgraph containing *n*. The largest maximal clique is sometimes
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called the *maximum clique*.
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This function returns an iterator over cliques, each of which is a
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list of nodes. It is an iterative implementation, so should not
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suffer from recursion depth issues.
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This function accepts a list of `nodes` and only the maximal cliques
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containing all of these `nodes` are returned. It can considerably speed up
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the running time if some specific cliques are desired.
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Parameters
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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An undirected graph.
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nodes : list, optional (default=None)
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If provided, only yield *maximal cliques* containing all nodes in `nodes`.
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If `nodes` isn't a clique itself, a ValueError is raised.
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Returns
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-------
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iterator
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An iterator over maximal cliques, each of which is a list of
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nodes in `G`. If `nodes` is provided, only the maximal cliques
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containing all the nodes in `nodes` are returned. The order of
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cliques is arbitrary.
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Raises
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------
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ValueError
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If `nodes` is not a clique.
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Examples
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--------
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>>> from pprint import pprint # For nice dict formatting
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>>> G = nx.karate_club_graph()
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>>> sum(1 for c in nx.find_cliques(G)) # The number of maximal cliques in G
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36
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>>> max(nx.find_cliques(G), key=len) # The largest maximal clique in G
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[0, 1, 2, 3, 13]
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The size of the largest maximal clique is known as the *clique number* of
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the graph, which can be found directly with:
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>>> max(len(c) for c in nx.find_cliques(G))
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5
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One can also compute the number of maximal cliques in `G` that contain a given
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node. The following produces a dictionary keyed by node whose
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values are the number of maximal cliques in `G` that contain the node:
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>>> pprint({n: sum(1 for c in nx.find_cliques(G) if n in c) for n in G})
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{0: 13,
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1: 6,
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2: 7,
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3: 3,
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4: 2,
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5: 3,
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6: 3,
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7: 1,
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8: 3,
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9: 2,
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10: 2,
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11: 1,
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12: 1,
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13: 2,
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14: 1,
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15: 1,
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16: 1,
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17: 1,
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18: 1,
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19: 2,
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20: 1,
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21: 1,
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22: 1,
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23: 3,
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24: 2,
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25: 2,
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26: 1,
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27: 3,
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28: 2,
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29: 2,
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30: 2,
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31: 4,
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32: 9,
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33: 14}
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Or, similarly, the maximal cliques in `G` that contain a given node.
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For example, the 4 maximal cliques that contain node 31:
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>>> [c for c in nx.find_cliques(G) if 31 in c]
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[[0, 31], [33, 32, 31], [33, 28, 31], [24, 25, 31]]
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See Also
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--------
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find_cliques_recursive
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A recursive version of the same algorithm.
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Notes
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-----
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To obtain a list of all maximal cliques, use
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`list(find_cliques(G))`. However, be aware that in the worst-case,
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the length of this list can be exponential in the number of nodes in
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the graph. This function avoids storing all cliques in memory by
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only keeping current candidate node lists in memory during its search.
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This implementation is based on the algorithm published by Bron and
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Kerbosch (1973) [1]_, as adapted by Tomita, Tanaka and Takahashi
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(2006) [2]_ and discussed in Cazals and Karande (2008) [3]_. It
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essentially unrolls the recursion used in the references to avoid
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issues of recursion stack depth (for a recursive implementation, see
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:func:`find_cliques_recursive`).
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This algorithm ignores self-loops and parallel edges, since cliques
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are not conventionally defined with such edges.
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References
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----------
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.. [1] Bron, C. and Kerbosch, J.
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"Algorithm 457: finding all cliques of an undirected graph".
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*Communications of the ACM* 16, 9 (Sep. 1973), 575--577.
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<http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=362342.362367>
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.. [2] Etsuji Tomita, Akira Tanaka, Haruhisa Takahashi,
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"The worst-case time complexity for generating all maximal
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cliques and computational experiments",
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*Theoretical Computer Science*, Volume 363, Issue 1,
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Computing and Combinatorics,
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10th Annual International Conference on
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Computing and Combinatorics (COCOON 2004), 25 October 2006, Pages 28--42
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<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tcs.2006.06.015>
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.. [3] F. Cazals, C. Karande,
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"A note on the problem of reporting maximal cliques",
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*Theoretical Computer Science*,
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Volume 407, Issues 1--3, 6 November 2008, Pages 564--568,
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<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tcs.2008.05.010>
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"""
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if len(G) == 0:
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return
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adj = {u: {v for v in G[u] if v != u} for u in G}
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# Initialize Q with the given nodes and subg, cand with their nbrs
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Q = nodes[:] if nodes is not None else []
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cand = set(G)
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for node in Q:
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if node not in cand:
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raise ValueError(f"The given `nodes` {nodes} do not form a clique")
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cand &= adj[node]
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if not cand:
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yield Q[:]
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return
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subg = cand.copy()
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stack = []
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Q.append(None)
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u = max(subg, key=lambda u: len(cand & adj[u]))
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ext_u = cand - adj[u]
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try:
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while True:
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if ext_u:
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q = ext_u.pop()
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cand.remove(q)
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Q[-1] = q
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adj_q = adj[q]
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subg_q = subg & adj_q
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if not subg_q:
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yield Q[:]
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else:
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cand_q = cand & adj_q
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if cand_q:
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stack.append((subg, cand, ext_u))
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Q.append(None)
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subg = subg_q
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cand = cand_q
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u = max(subg, key=lambda u: len(cand & adj[u]))
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ext_u = cand - adj[u]
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else:
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Q.pop()
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subg, cand, ext_u = stack.pop()
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except IndexError:
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pass
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# TODO Should this also be not implemented for directed graphs?
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@nx._dispatch
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def find_cliques_recursive(G, nodes=None):
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"""Returns all maximal cliques in a graph.
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For each node *v*, a *maximal clique for v* is a largest complete
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subgraph containing *v*. The largest maximal clique is sometimes
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called the *maximum clique*.
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This function returns an iterator over cliques, each of which is a
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list of nodes. It is a recursive implementation, so may suffer from
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recursion depth issues, but is included for pedagogical reasons.
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For a non-recursive implementation, see :func:`find_cliques`.
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This function accepts a list of `nodes` and only the maximal cliques
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containing all of these `nodes` are returned. It can considerably speed up
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the running time if some specific cliques are desired.
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Parameters
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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nodes : list, optional (default=None)
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If provided, only yield *maximal cliques* containing all nodes in `nodes`.
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If `nodes` isn't a clique itself, a ValueError is raised.
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Returns
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-------
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iterator
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An iterator over maximal cliques, each of which is a list of
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nodes in `G`. If `nodes` is provided, only the maximal cliques
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containing all the nodes in `nodes` are yielded. The order of
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cliques is arbitrary.
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Raises
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------
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ValueError
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If `nodes` is not a clique.
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See Also
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--------
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find_cliques
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An iterative version of the same algorithm. See docstring for examples.
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Notes
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-----
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To obtain a list of all maximal cliques, use
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`list(find_cliques_recursive(G))`. However, be aware that in the
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worst-case, the length of this list can be exponential in the number
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of nodes in the graph. This function avoids storing all cliques in memory
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by only keeping current candidate node lists in memory during its search.
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|
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This implementation is based on the algorithm published by Bron and
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Kerbosch (1973) [1]_, as adapted by Tomita, Tanaka and Takahashi
|
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(2006) [2]_ and discussed in Cazals and Karande (2008) [3]_. For a
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non-recursive implementation, see :func:`find_cliques`.
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This algorithm ignores self-loops and parallel edges, since cliques
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are not conventionally defined with such edges.
|
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|
References
|
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----------
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.. [1] Bron, C. and Kerbosch, J.
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"Algorithm 457: finding all cliques of an undirected graph".
|
|
*Communications of the ACM* 16, 9 (Sep. 1973), 575--577.
|
|
<http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=362342.362367>
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.. [2] Etsuji Tomita, Akira Tanaka, Haruhisa Takahashi,
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|
"The worst-case time complexity for generating all maximal
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cliques and computational experiments",
|
|
*Theoretical Computer Science*, Volume 363, Issue 1,
|
|
Computing and Combinatorics,
|
|
10th Annual International Conference on
|
|
Computing and Combinatorics (COCOON 2004), 25 October 2006, Pages 28--42
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<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tcs.2006.06.015>
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.. [3] F. Cazals, C. Karande,
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"A note on the problem of reporting maximal cliques",
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*Theoretical Computer Science*,
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Volume 407, Issues 1--3, 6 November 2008, Pages 564--568,
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<https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tcs.2008.05.010>
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"""
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if len(G) == 0:
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return iter([])
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adj = {u: {v for v in G[u] if v != u} for u in G}
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# Initialize Q with the given nodes and subg, cand with their nbrs
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Q = nodes[:] if nodes is not None else []
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cand_init = set(G)
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for node in Q:
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if node not in cand_init:
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raise ValueError(f"The given `nodes` {nodes} do not form a clique")
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cand_init &= adj[node]
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if not cand_init:
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return iter([Q])
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subg_init = cand_init.copy()
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def expand(subg, cand):
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u = max(subg, key=lambda u: len(cand & adj[u]))
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for q in cand - adj[u]:
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cand.remove(q)
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Q.append(q)
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adj_q = adj[q]
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subg_q = subg & adj_q
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if not subg_q:
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yield Q[:]
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else:
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cand_q = cand & adj_q
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if cand_q:
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yield from expand(subg_q, cand_q)
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Q.pop()
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return expand(subg_init, cand_init)
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@nx._dispatch
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def make_max_clique_graph(G, create_using=None):
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"""Returns the maximal clique graph of the given graph.
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The nodes of the maximal clique graph of `G` are the cliques of
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`G` and an edge joins two cliques if the cliques are not disjoint.
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Parameters
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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create_using : NetworkX graph constructor, optional (default=nx.Graph)
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Graph type to create. If graph instance, then cleared before populated.
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Returns
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-------
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NetworkX graph
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A graph whose nodes are the cliques of `G` and whose edges
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join two cliques if they are not disjoint.
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Notes
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-----
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This function behaves like the following code::
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import networkx as nx
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G = nx.make_clique_bipartite(G)
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cliques = [v for v in G.nodes() if G.nodes[v]['bipartite'] == 0]
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G = nx.bipartite.projected_graph(G, cliques)
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G = nx.relabel_nodes(G, {-v: v - 1 for v in G})
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It should be faster, though, since it skips all the intermediate
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steps.
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"""
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if create_using is None:
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B = G.__class__()
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else:
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B = nx.empty_graph(0, create_using)
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cliques = list(enumerate(set(c) for c in find_cliques(G)))
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# Add a numbered node for each clique.
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B.add_nodes_from(i for i, c in cliques)
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# Join cliques by an edge if they share a node.
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clique_pairs = combinations(cliques, 2)
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B.add_edges_from((i, j) for (i, c1), (j, c2) in clique_pairs if c1 & c2)
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return B
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@nx._dispatch
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def make_clique_bipartite(G, fpos=None, create_using=None, name=None):
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"""Returns the bipartite clique graph corresponding to `G`.
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In the returned bipartite graph, the "bottom" nodes are the nodes of
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`G` and the "top" nodes represent the maximal cliques of `G`.
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There is an edge from node *v* to clique *C* in the returned graph
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if and only if *v* is an element of *C*.
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Parameters
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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An undirected graph.
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fpos : bool
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If True or not None, the returned graph will have an
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additional attribute, `pos`, a dictionary mapping node to
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position in the Euclidean plane.
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create_using : NetworkX graph constructor, optional (default=nx.Graph)
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Graph type to create. If graph instance, then cleared before populated.
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Returns
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-------
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NetworkX graph
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A bipartite graph whose "bottom" set is the nodes of the graph
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`G`, whose "top" set is the cliques of `G`, and whose edges
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join nodes of `G` to the cliques that contain them.
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The nodes of the graph `G` have the node attribute
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'bipartite' set to 1 and the nodes representing cliques
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have the node attribute 'bipartite' set to 0, as is the
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convention for bipartite graphs in NetworkX.
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"""
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B = nx.empty_graph(0, create_using)
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B.clear()
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# The "bottom" nodes in the bipartite graph are the nodes of the
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# original graph, G.
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B.add_nodes_from(G, bipartite=1)
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for i, cl in enumerate(find_cliques(G)):
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# The "top" nodes in the bipartite graph are the cliques. These
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# nodes get negative numbers as labels.
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name = -i - 1
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B.add_node(name, bipartite=0)
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B.add_edges_from((v, name) for v in cl)
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return B
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@nx._dispatch
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def node_clique_number(G, nodes=None, cliques=None, separate_nodes=False):
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"""Returns the size of the largest maximal clique containing each given node.
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Returns a single or list depending on input nodes.
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An optional list of cliques can be input if already computed.
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Parameters
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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An undirected graph.
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cliques : list, optional (default=None)
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A list of cliques, each of which is itself a list of nodes.
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If not specified, the list of all cliques will be computed
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using :func:`find_cliques`.
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Returns
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-------
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int or dict
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If `nodes` is a single node, returns the size of the
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largest maximal clique in `G` containing that node.
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Otherwise return a dict keyed by node to the size
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of the largest maximal clique containing that node.
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See Also
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--------
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find_cliques
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find_cliques yields the maximal cliques of G.
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It accepts a `nodes` argument which restricts consideration to
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maximal cliques containing all the given `nodes`.
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The search for the cliques is optimized for `nodes`.
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"""
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if cliques is None:
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if nodes is not None:
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# Use ego_graph to decrease size of graph
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# check for single node
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if nodes in G:
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return max(len(c) for c in find_cliques(nx.ego_graph(G, nodes)))
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# handle multiple nodes
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return {
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n: max(len(c) for c in find_cliques(nx.ego_graph(G, n))) for n in nodes
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}
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# nodes is None--find all cliques
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cliques = list(find_cliques(G))
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# single node requested
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if nodes in G:
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return max(len(c) for c in cliques if nodes in c)
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# multiple nodes requested
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# preprocess all nodes (faster than one at a time for even 2 nodes)
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size_for_n = defaultdict(int)
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for c in cliques:
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size_of_c = len(c)
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for n in c:
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if size_for_n[n] < size_of_c:
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size_for_n[n] = size_of_c
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if nodes is None:
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return size_for_n
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return {n: size_for_n[n] for n in nodes}
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def number_of_cliques(G, nodes=None, cliques=None):
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"""Returns the number of maximal cliques for each node.
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Returns a single or list depending on input nodes.
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Optional list of cliques can be input if already computed.
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"""
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if cliques is None:
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cliques = list(find_cliques(G))
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if nodes is None:
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nodes = list(G.nodes()) # none, get entire graph
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if not isinstance(nodes, list): # check for a list
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v = nodes
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# assume it is a single value
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numcliq = len([1 for c in cliques if v in c])
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else:
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numcliq = {}
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for v in nodes:
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numcliq[v] = len([1 for c in cliques if v in c])
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return numcliq
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class MaxWeightClique:
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"""A class for the maximum weight clique algorithm.
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This class is a helper for the `max_weight_clique` function. The class
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should not normally be used directly.
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Parameters
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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The undirected graph for which a maximum weight clique is sought
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weight : string or None, optional (default='weight')
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The node attribute that holds the integer value used as a weight.
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If None, then each node has weight 1.
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Attributes
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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The undirected graph for which a maximum weight clique is sought
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node_weights: dict
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The weight of each node
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incumbent_nodes : list
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The nodes of the incumbent clique (the best clique found so far)
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incumbent_weight: int
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The weight of the incumbent clique
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"""
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def __init__(self, G, weight):
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self.G = G
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self.incumbent_nodes = []
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self.incumbent_weight = 0
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if weight is None:
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self.node_weights = {v: 1 for v in G.nodes()}
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else:
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for v in G.nodes():
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if weight not in G.nodes[v]:
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errmsg = f"Node {v!r} does not have the requested weight field."
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raise KeyError(errmsg)
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if not isinstance(G.nodes[v][weight], int):
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errmsg = f"The {weight!r} field of node {v!r} is not an integer."
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raise ValueError(errmsg)
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self.node_weights = {v: G.nodes[v][weight] for v in G.nodes()}
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def update_incumbent_if_improved(self, C, C_weight):
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"""Update the incumbent if the node set C has greater weight.
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C is assumed to be a clique.
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"""
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if C_weight > self.incumbent_weight:
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self.incumbent_nodes = C[:]
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self.incumbent_weight = C_weight
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def greedily_find_independent_set(self, P):
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"""Greedily find an independent set of nodes from a set of
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nodes P."""
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independent_set = []
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P = P[:]
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while P:
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v = P[0]
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independent_set.append(v)
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P = [w for w in P if v != w and not self.G.has_edge(v, w)]
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return independent_set
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def find_branching_nodes(self, P, target):
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"""Find a set of nodes to branch on."""
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residual_wt = {v: self.node_weights[v] for v in P}
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total_wt = 0
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P = P[:]
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while P:
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independent_set = self.greedily_find_independent_set(P)
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min_wt_in_class = min(residual_wt[v] for v in independent_set)
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total_wt += min_wt_in_class
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if total_wt > target:
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break
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for v in independent_set:
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residual_wt[v] -= min_wt_in_class
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P = [v for v in P if residual_wt[v] != 0]
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return P
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def expand(self, C, C_weight, P):
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"""Look for the best clique that contains all the nodes in C and zero or
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more of the nodes in P, backtracking if it can be shown that no such
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clique has greater weight than the incumbent.
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"""
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self.update_incumbent_if_improved(C, C_weight)
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branching_nodes = self.find_branching_nodes(P, self.incumbent_weight - C_weight)
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while branching_nodes:
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v = branching_nodes.pop()
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P.remove(v)
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new_C = C + [v]
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new_C_weight = C_weight + self.node_weights[v]
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new_P = [w for w in P if self.G.has_edge(v, w)]
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self.expand(new_C, new_C_weight, new_P)
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def find_max_weight_clique(self):
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"""Find a maximum weight clique."""
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# Sort nodes in reverse order of degree for speed
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nodes = sorted(self.G.nodes(), key=lambda v: self.G.degree(v), reverse=True)
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nodes = [v for v in nodes if self.node_weights[v] > 0]
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self.expand([], 0, nodes)
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@not_implemented_for("directed")
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@nx._dispatch(node_attrs="weight")
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def max_weight_clique(G, weight="weight"):
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"""Find a maximum weight clique in G.
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A *clique* in a graph is a set of nodes such that every two distinct nodes
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are adjacent. The *weight* of a clique is the sum of the weights of its
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nodes. A *maximum weight clique* of graph G is a clique C in G such that
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no clique in G has weight greater than the weight of C.
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Parameters
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----------
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G : NetworkX graph
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Undirected graph
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weight : string or None, optional (default='weight')
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The node attribute that holds the integer value used as a weight.
|
|
If None, then each node has weight 1.
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Returns
|
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-------
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clique : list
|
|
the nodes of a maximum weight clique
|
|
weight : int
|
|
the weight of a maximum weight clique
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Notes
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-----
|
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The implementation is recursive, and therefore it may run into recursion
|
|
depth issues if G contains a clique whose number of nodes is close to the
|
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recursion depth limit.
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At each search node, the algorithm greedily constructs a weighted
|
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independent set cover of part of the graph in order to find a small set of
|
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nodes on which to branch. The algorithm is very similar to the algorithm
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of Tavares et al. [1]_, other than the fact that the NetworkX version does
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not use bitsets. This style of algorithm for maximum weight clique (and
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maximum weight independent set, which is the same problem but on the
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complement graph) has a decades-long history. See Algorithm B of Warren
|
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and Hicks [2]_ and the references in that paper.
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|
References
|
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----------
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.. [1] Tavares, W.A., Neto, M.B.C., Rodrigues, C.D., Michelon, P.: Um
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algoritmo de branch and bound para o problema da clique máxima
|
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ponderada. Proceedings of XLVII SBPO 1 (2015).
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.. [2] Warren, Jeffrey S, Hicks, Illya V.: Combinatorial Branch-and-Bound
|
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for the Maximum Weight Independent Set Problem. Technical Report,
|
|
Texas A&M University (2016).
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"""
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|
|
mwc = MaxWeightClique(G, weight)
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mwc.find_max_weight_clique()
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return mwc.incumbent_nodes, mwc.incumbent_weight
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