N - Node parameter typeE - Edge parameter type@Beta public interface Network<N,E> extends SuccessorsFunction<N>, PredecessorsFunction<N>
A graph is composed of a set of nodes and a set of edges connecting pairs of nodes.
There are three primary interfaces provided to represent graphs. In order of increasing
 complexity they are: Graph, ValueGraph, and Network. You should generally
 prefer the simplest interface that satisfies your use case. See the 
 "Choosing the right graph type" section of the Guava User Guide for more details.
 
Network supports the following use cases (definitions of
 terms):
 
NetworkThe implementation classes that common.graph provides are not public, by design. To
 create an instance of one of the built-in implementations of Network, use the NetworkBuilder class:
 
 MutableNetwork<Integer, MyEdge> graph = NetworkBuilder.directed().build();
 
 NetworkBuilder.build() returns an instance of MutableNetwork, which is a
 subtype of Network that provides methods for adding and removing nodes and edges. If you
 do not need to mutate a graph (e.g. if you write a method than runs a read-only algorithm on the
 graph), you should use the non-mutating Network interface, or an ImmutableNetwork.
 
You can create an immutable copy of an existing Network using ImmutableNetwork.copyOf(Network):
 
 ImmutableNetwork<Integer, MyEdge> immutableGraph = ImmutableNetwork.copyOf(graph);
 
 Instances of ImmutableNetwork do not implement MutableNetwork (obviously!) and
 are contractually guaranteed to be unmodifiable and thread-safe.
 
The Guava User Guide has more information on (and examples of) building graphs.
See the Guava User Guide for the common.graph package ("Graphs Explained") for
 additional documentation, including:
 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
Set<E> | 
adjacentEdges(E edge)
Returns the edges which have an  
incident node in common with
 edge. | 
Set<N> | 
adjacentNodes(N node)
Returns the nodes which have an incident edge in common with  
node in this network. | 
boolean | 
allowsParallelEdges()
Returns true if this network allows parallel edges. 
 | 
boolean | 
allowsSelfLoops()
Returns true if this network allows self-loops (edges that connect a node to itself). 
 | 
Graph<N> | 
asGraph()
Returns a live view of this network as a  
Graph. | 
int | 
degree(N node)
Returns the count of  
node's incident edges, counting
 self-loops twice (equivalently, the number of times an edge touches node). | 
E | 
edgeConnectingOrNull(EndpointPair<N> endpoints)
Returns the single edge that directly connects  
endpoints (in the order, if any,
 specified by endpoints), if one is present, or null if no such edge exists. | 
E | 
edgeConnectingOrNull(N nodeU,
                    N nodeV)
Returns the single edge that directly connects  
nodeU to nodeV, if one is
 present, or null if no such edge exists. | 
ElementOrder<E> | 
edgeOrder()
Returns the order of iteration for the elements of  
edges(). | 
Set<E> | 
edges()
Returns all edges in this network, in the order specified by  
edgeOrder(). | 
Set<E> | 
edgesConnecting(EndpointPair<N> endpoints)
Returns the set of edges that each directly connect  
endpoints (in the order, if any,
 specified by endpoints). | 
Set<E> | 
edgesConnecting(N nodeU,
               N nodeV)
Returns the set of edges that each directly connect  
nodeU to nodeV. | 
boolean | 
equals(Object object)
Returns  
true iff object is a Network that has the same elements and the
 same structural relationships as those in this network. | 
boolean | 
hasEdgeConnecting(EndpointPair<N> endpoints)
Returns true if there is an edge that directly connects  
endpoints (in the order, if
 any, specified by endpoints). | 
boolean | 
hasEdgeConnecting(N nodeU,
                 N nodeV)
Returns true if there is an edge that directly connects  
nodeU to nodeV. | 
int | 
hashCode()
Returns the hash code for this network. 
 | 
Set<E> | 
incidentEdges(N node)
Returns the edges whose  
incident nodes in this network include
 node. | 
EndpointPair<N> | 
incidentNodes(E edge)
Returns the nodes which are the endpoints of  
edge in this network. | 
int | 
inDegree(N node)
Returns the count of  
node's incoming edges in a directed
 network. | 
Set<E> | 
inEdges(N node)
Returns all edges in this network which can be traversed in the direction (if any) of the edge
 to end at  
node. | 
boolean | 
isDirected()
Returns true if the edges in this network are directed. 
 | 
ElementOrder<N> | 
nodeOrder()
Returns the order of iteration for the elements of  
nodes(). | 
Set<N> | 
nodes()
Returns all nodes in this network, in the order specified by  
nodeOrder(). | 
int | 
outDegree(N node)
Returns the count of  
node's outgoing edges in a directed
 network. | 
Set<E> | 
outEdges(N node)
Returns all edges in this network which can be traversed in the direction (if any) of the edge
 starting from  
node. | 
Set<N> | 
predecessors(N node)
Returns all nodes in this network adjacent to  
node which can be reached by traversing
 node's incoming edges against the direction (if any) of the edge. | 
Set<N> | 
successors(N node)
Returns all nodes in this network adjacent to  
node which can be reached by traversing
 node's outgoing edges in the direction (if any) of the edge. | 
Set<N> nodes()
nodeOrder().Set<E> edges()
edgeOrder().Graph<N> asGraph()
Graph. The resulting Graph will have
 an edge connecting node A to node B if this Network has an edge connecting A to B.
 If this network allows parallel edges, parallel edges will be
 treated as if collapsed into a single edge. For example, the degree(Object) of a node
 in the Graph view may be less than the degree of the same node in this Network.
boolean isDirected()
source node to a target node, while
 undirected edges connect a pair of nodes to each other.boolean allowsParallelEdges()
IllegalArgumentException.boolean allowsSelfLoops()
IllegalArgumentException.ElementOrder<N> nodeOrder()
nodes().ElementOrder<E> edgeOrder()
edges().Set<N> adjacentNodes(N node)
node in this network.
 This is equal to the union of predecessors(Object) and successors(Object).
IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkSet<N> predecessors(N node)
node which can be reached by traversing
 node's incoming edges against the direction (if any) of the edge.
 In an undirected network, this is equivalent to adjacentNodes(Object).
predecessors in interface PredecessorsFunction<N>IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkSet<N> successors(N node)
node which can be reached by traversing
 node's outgoing edges in the direction (if any) of the edge.
 In an undirected network, this is equivalent to adjacentNodes(Object).
 
This is not the same as "all nodes reachable from node by following outgoing
 edges". For that functionality, see Graphs.reachableNodes(Graph, Object).
successors in interface SuccessorsFunction<N>IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkSet<E> incidentEdges(N node)
incident nodes in this network include
 node.
 This is equal to the union of inEdges(Object) and outEdges(Object).
IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkSet<E> inEdges(N node)
node.
 In a directed network, an incoming edge's EndpointPair.target() equals node.
 
In an undirected network, this is equivalent to incidentEdges(Object).
IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkSet<E> outEdges(N node)
node.
 In a directed network, an outgoing edge's EndpointPair.source() equals node.
 
In an undirected network, this is equivalent to incidentEdges(Object).
IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkint degree(N node)
node's incident edges, counting
 self-loops twice (equivalently, the number of times an edge touches node).
 For directed networks, this is equal to inDegree(node) + outDegree(node).
 
For undirected networks, this is equal to incidentEdges(node).size() + (number of
 self-loops incident to node).
 
If the count is greater than Integer.MAX_VALUE, returns Integer.MAX_VALUE.
IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkint inDegree(N node)
node's incoming edges in a directed
 network. In an undirected network, returns the degree(Object).
 If the count is greater than Integer.MAX_VALUE, returns Integer.MAX_VALUE.
IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkint outDegree(N node)
node's outgoing edges in a directed
 network. In an undirected network, returns the degree(Object).
 If the count is greater than Integer.MAX_VALUE, returns Integer.MAX_VALUE.
IllegalArgumentException - if node is not an element of this networkEndpointPair<N> incidentNodes(E edge)
edge in this network.IllegalArgumentException - if edge is not an element of this networkSet<E> adjacentEdges(E edge)
incident node in common with
 edge. An edge is not considered adjacent to itself.IllegalArgumentException - if edge is not an element of this networkSet<E> edgesConnecting(N nodeU, N nodeV)
nodeU to nodeV.
 In an undirected network, this is equal to edgesConnecting(nodeV, nodeU).
 
The resulting set of edges will be parallel (i.e. have equal incidentNodes(Object).
 If this network does not allow parallel edges, the resulting set
 will contain at most one edge (equivalent to edgeConnecting(nodeU, nodeV).asSet()).
IllegalArgumentException - if nodeU or nodeV is not an element of this
     networkSet<E> edgesConnecting(EndpointPair<N> endpoints)
endpoints (in the order, if any,
 specified by endpoints).
 The resulting set of edges will be parallel (i.e. have equal incidentNodes(Object).
 If this network does not allow parallel edges, the resulting set
 will contain at most one edge (equivalent to edgeConnecting(endpoints).asSet()).
 
If this network is directed, endpoints must be ordered.
IllegalArgumentException - if either endpoint is not an element of this networkIllegalArgumentException - if the endpoints are unordered and the graph is directed@NullableDecl E edgeConnectingOrNull(N nodeU, N nodeV)
nodeU to nodeV, if one is
 present, or null if no such edge exists.
 In an undirected network, this is equal to edgeConnectingOrNull(nodeV, nodeU).
IllegalArgumentException - if there are multiple parallel edges connecting nodeU
     to nodeVIllegalArgumentException - if nodeU or nodeV is not an element of this
     network@NullableDecl E edgeConnectingOrNull(EndpointPair<N> endpoints)
endpoints (in the order, if any,
 specified by endpoints), if one is present, or null if no such edge exists.
 If this graph is directed, the endpoints must be ordered.
IllegalArgumentException - if there are multiple parallel edges connecting nodeU
     to nodeVIllegalArgumentException - if either endpoint is not an element of this networkIllegalArgumentException - if the endpoints are unordered and the graph is directedboolean hasEdgeConnecting(N nodeU, N nodeV)
nodeU to nodeV. This is
 equivalent to nodes().contains(nodeU) && successors(nodeU).contains(nodeV), and to
 edgeConnectingOrNull(nodeU, nodeV) != null.
 In an undirected graph, this is equal to hasEdgeConnecting(nodeV, nodeU).
boolean hasEdgeConnecting(EndpointPair<N> endpoints)
endpoints (in the order, if
 any, specified by endpoints).
 Unlike the other EndpointPair-accepting methods, this method does not throw if the
 endpoints are unordered and the graph is directed; it simply returns false. This is for
 consistency with Graph.hasEdgeConnecting(EndpointPair) and ValueGraph.hasEdgeConnecting(EndpointPair).
boolean equals(@NullableDecl Object object)
true iff object is a Network that has the same elements and the
 same structural relationships as those in this network.
 Thus, two networks A and B are equal if all of the following are true:
directedness.
   node sets.
   edge sets.
   Network properties besides directedness do not affect equality.
 For example, two networks may be considered equal even if one allows parallel edges and the
 other doesn't. Additionally, the order in which nodes or edges are added to the network, and
 the order in which they are iterated over, are irrelevant.
 
A reference implementation of this is provided by AbstractNetwork.equals(Object).
equals in class Objectobject - the reference object with which to compare.true if this object is the same as the obj
          argument; false otherwise.Object.hashCode(), 
HashMapint hashCode()
edges to their incident nodes.
 A reference implementation of this is provided by AbstractNetwork.hashCode().
hashCode in class ObjectObject.equals(java.lang.Object), 
System.identityHashCode(java.lang.Object)Copyright © 2010–2019. All rights reserved.