a question about graph in R
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jiabao xu ▴ 50
@jiabao-xu-2773
Last seen 10.2 years ago
hello,everyone: I have two graphs: G1(V,E) ,G2(V2,E2) (V2∈V,E2∈E),how to got the G(V1,E1) ,G1∪G2=G,V1∪V2=V,E1∪E2=E. THANKS FOR YOUR REPLIES! [[alternative HTML version deleted]]
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Seth Falcon ★ 7.4k
@seth-falcon-992
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Hi Jiabao, On 11/20/09 11:26 PM, jiabao xu wrote: > hello,everyone: > I have two graphs: G1(V,E) ,G2(V2,E2) (V2?V,E2?E),how to got the G(V1,E1) > ,G1?G2=G,V1?V2=V,E1?E2=E. The graph package has intersection() and union() functions that may give you what you want. If not, perhaps you can give a more detailed example for what you want. In particular, I'm not sure I understand your notation. Looks to me like you have defined G2 such that V2 is a subset of V and E2 a subset of E and G1 is (V, E). So then union(G1, G2) is just G1? + seth
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Seth Falcon ★ 7.4k
@seth-falcon-992
Last seen 10.2 years ago
Hi, [replying on the list] On 11/22/09 12:58 AM, jiabao xu wrote: > Hi Seth Falcon, > thanks for your reply .G1 and G2 are parts of G.and union(G1,G2) is > G,If i know the G and G2 ,how to get G1.I am sorry for that i didn't > describle clear in the last email. Hmm, I'm still a bit confused. Do you know that G1 and G2 are disjoint? I don't think there is currently a set difference type operations in the graph package which might be what you want. You can find the nodes as: g1_nodes = setdiff(nodes(G), nodes(G2)) # these will be the G1 nodes Then perhaps you can just do subGraph(G, g1_nodes) Hope that helps some. + seth > > On Sun, Nov 22, 2009 at 12:11 PM, Seth Falcon <sfalcon at="" fhcrc.org=""> <mailto:sfalcon at="" fhcrc.org="">> wrote: > > Hi Jiabao, > > > On 11/20/09 11:26 PM, jiabao xu wrote: > > hello,everyone: > I have two graphs: G1(V,E) ,G2(V2,E2) (V2?V,E2?E),how to got the > G(V1,E1) > ,G1?G2=G,V1?V2=V,E1?E2=E. > > > The graph package has intersection() and union() functions that may > give you what you want. > > If not, perhaps you can give a more detailed example for what you > want. In particular, I'm not sure I understand your notation. > Looks to me like you have defined G2 such that V2 is a subset of V > and E2 a subset of E and G1 is (V, E). So then union(G1, G2) is > just G1? > > + seth > > -- Seth Falcon Program in Computational Biology | Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
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Hi, On Nov 23, 2009, at 7:53 PM, Seth Falcon wrote: > Hi, > > [replying on the list] > > On 11/22/09 12:58 AM, jiabao xu wrote: >> Hi Seth Falcon, >> thanks for your reply .G1 and G2 are parts of G.and union(G1,G2) is >> G,If i know the G and G2 ,how to get G1.I am sorry for that i didn't >> describle clear in the last email. You might want to look at the igraph package. It has a graph.difference function, which sounds like what you might be looking for: "graph.difference creates the difference of two graphs. Only edges present in the first graph but not in the second will be be included in the new graph." -steve -- Steve Lianoglou Graduate Student: Computational Systems Biology | Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center | Weill Medical College of Cornell University Contact Info: http://cbio.mskcc.org/~lianos/contact
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