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Note

This documents the development version of NetworkX. Documentation for the current release can be found here.

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networkx.convert_matrix.to_scipy_sparse_matrix

to_scipy_sparse_matrix(G, nodelist=None, dtype=None, weight='weight', format='csr')[source]

Returns the graph adjacency matrix as a SciPy sparse matrix.

Parameters
  • G (graph) – The NetworkX graph used to construct the sparse matrix.

  • nodelist (list, optional) – The rows and columns are ordered according to the nodes in nodelist. If nodelist is None, then the ordering is produced by G.nodes().

  • dtype (NumPy data-type, optional) – A valid NumPy dtype used to initialize the array. If None, then the NumPy default is used.

  • weight (string or None optional (default=’weight’)) – The edge attribute that holds the numerical value used for the edge weight. If None then all edge weights are 1.

  • format (str in {‘bsr’, ‘csr’, ‘csc’, ‘coo’, ‘lil’, ‘dia’, ‘dok’}) – The type of the matrix to be returned (default ‘csr’). For some algorithms different implementations of sparse matrices can perform better. See 1 for details.

Returns

M – Graph adjacency matrix.

Return type

SciPy sparse matrix

Notes

For directed graphs, matrix entry i,j corresponds to an edge from i to j.

The matrix entries are populated using the edge attribute held in parameter weight. When an edge does not have that attribute, the value of the entry is 1.

For multiple edges the matrix values are the sums of the edge weights.

When nodelist does not contain every node in G, the adjacency matrix is built from the subgraph of G that is induced by the nodes in nodelist.

The convention used for self-loop edges in graphs is to assign the diagonal matrix entry value to the weight attribute of the edge (or the number 1 if the edge has no weight attribute). If the alternate convention of doubling the edge weight is desired the resulting Scipy sparse matrix can be modified as follows:

>>> import scipy as sp
>>> G = nx.Graph([(1, 1)])
>>> A = nx.to_scipy_sparse_matrix(G)
>>> print(A.todense())
[[1]]
>>> A.setdiag(A.diagonal() * 2)
>>> print(A.todense())
[[2]]

Examples

>>> G = nx.MultiDiGraph()
>>> G.add_edge(0, 1, weight=2)
0
>>> G.add_edge(1, 0)
0
>>> G.add_edge(2, 2, weight=3)
0
>>> G.add_edge(2, 2)
1
>>> S = nx.to_scipy_sparse_matrix(G, nodelist=[0, 1, 2])
>>> print(S.todense())
[[0 2 0]
 [1 0 0]
 [0 0 4]]

References

1

Scipy Dev. References, “Sparse Matrices”, https://docs.scipy.org/doc/scipy/reference/sparse.html