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/*
 * Copyright (C) 2016 The Guava Authors
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */

package com.google.common.graph;

import com.google.common.annotations.Beta;
import java.util.Optional;
import java.util.Set;
import javax.annotation.Nullable;

/**
 * An interface for graph-structured data,
 * whose edges have associated non-unique values.
 *
 * 

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: {@link Graph}, {@link ValueGraph}, and {@link 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. * *

Capabilities

* *

{@code ValueGraph} supports the following use cases (definitions of * terms): * *

    *
  • directed graphs *
  • undirected graphs *
  • graphs that do/don't allow self-loops *
  • graphs whose nodes/edges are insertion-ordered, sorted, or unordered *
  • graphs whose edges have associated values *
* *

{@code ValueGraph}, as a subtype of {@code Graph}, explicitly does not support parallel edges, * and forbids implementations or extensions with parallel edges. If you need parallel edges, use * {@link Network}. (You can use a positive {@code Integer} edge value as a loose representation of * edge multiplicity, but the {@code *degree()} and mutation methods will not reflect your * interpretation of the edge value as its multiplicity.) * *

Building a {@code ValueGraph}

* *

The implementation classes that {@code common.graph} provides are not public, by design. To * create an instance of one of the built-in implementations of {@code ValueGraph}, use the * {@link ValueGraphBuilder} class: * *

{@code
 *   MutableValueGraph graph = ValueGraphBuilder.directed().build();
 * }
* *

{@link ValueGraphBuilder#build()} returns an instance of {@link MutableValueGraph}, which is a * subtype of {@code ValueGraph} 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 {@link ValueGraph} interface, or an {@link * ImmutableValueGraph}. * *

You can create an immutable copy of an existing {@code ValueGraph} using {@link * ImmutableValueGraph#copyOf(ValueGraph)}: * *

{@code
 *   ImmutableValueGraph immutableGraph = ImmutableValueGraph.copyOf(graph);
 * }
* *

Instances of {@link ImmutableValueGraph} do not implement {@link MutableValueGraph} * (obviously!) and are contractually guaranteed to be unmodifiable and thread-safe. * *

The Guava User Guide has more * information on (and examples of) building graphs. * *

Additional documentation

* *

See the Guava User Guide for the {@code common.graph} package ("Graphs Explained") for * additional documentation, including: * *

* * @author James Sexton * @author Joshua O'Madadhain * @param Node parameter type * @param Value parameter type * @since 20.0 */ @Beta public interface ValueGraph extends BaseGraph { // // ValueGraph-level accessors // /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override Set nodes(); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override Set> edges(); /** * Returns a live view of this graph as a {@link Graph}. The resulting {@link Graph} will have an * edge connecting node A to node B if this {@link ValueGraph} has an edge connecting A to B. */ Graph asGraph(); // // ValueGraph properties // /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override boolean isDirected(); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override boolean allowsSelfLoops(); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override ElementOrder nodeOrder(); // // Element-level accessors // /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override Set adjacentNodes(N node); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override Set predecessors(N node); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override Set successors(N node); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override int degree(N node); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override int inDegree(N node); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override int outDegree(N node); /** {@inheritDoc} */ @Override boolean hasEdgeConnecting(N nodeU, N nodeV); /** * Returns the value of the edge connecting {@code nodeU} to {@code nodeV}, if one is present; * otherwise, returns {@code Optional.empty()}. * *

In an undirected graph, this is equal to {@code edgeValue(nodeV, nodeU)}. * * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code nodeU} or {@code nodeV} is not an element of this * graph * @since 23.0 (since 20.0 with return type {@code V}) */ Optional edgeValue(N nodeU, N nodeV); /** * Returns the value of the edge connecting {@code nodeU} to {@code nodeV}, if one is present; * otherwise, returns {@code defaultValue}. * *

In an undirected graph, this is equal to {@code edgeValueOrDefault(nodeV, nodeU, * defaultValue)}. * * @throws IllegalArgumentException if {@code nodeU} or {@code nodeV} is not an element of this * graph */ @Nullable V edgeValueOrDefault(N nodeU, N nodeV, @Nullable V defaultValue); // // ValueGraph identity // /** * Returns {@code true} iff {@code object} is a {@link ValueGraph} that has the same elements and * the same structural relationships as those in this graph. * *

Thus, two value graphs A and B are equal if all of the following are true: * *

    *
  • A and B have equal {@link #isDirected() directedness}. *
  • A and B have equal {@link #nodes() node sets}. *
  • A and B have equal {@link #edges() edge sets}. *
  • The {@link #edgeValue(Object, Object) value} of a given edge is the same in both A and B. *
* *

Graph properties besides {@link #isDirected() directedness} do not affect equality. * For example, two graphs may be considered equal even if one allows self-loops and the other * doesn't. Additionally, the order in which nodes or edges are added to the graph, and the order * in which they are iterated over, are irrelevant. * *

A reference implementation of this is provided by {@link AbstractValueGraph#equals(Object)}. */ @Override boolean equals(@Nullable Object object); /** * Returns the hash code for this graph. The hash code of a graph is defined as the hash code of a * map from each of its {@link #edges() edges} to the associated {@link #edgeValue(Object, Object) * edge value}. * *

A reference implementation of this is provided by {@link AbstractValueGraph#hashCode()}. */ @Override int hashCode(); }





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