ascii2graph

Converts ASCII text to a graph (represented as a dictionary of connections and


License
MPL-2.0
Install
pip install ascii2graph==0.3.3

Documentation

image image PyPI badge

ascii2graph

Converts ASCII text to a graph (represented as a dictionary of connections and angles). It can represent directed and undirected graphs.

Installation

$ pip install ascii2graph

Example

from ascii2graph import graph

text = r'''
a->boo
^   |   x
|   v  /
c<--d-e
    | |
    f-g'''

result = graph(text)
print(result)

This produces the following graph (dictionary):

result = {(1, 4, 'a'): [(1, 7, 'boo', 90)],
          (4, 4, 'c'): [(1, 4, 'a', 0)],
          (4, 8, 'd'): [(4, 4, 'c', 270), (4, 10, 'e', 90), (6, 8, 'f', 180)],
          (4, 10, 'e'): [(2, 12, 'x', 45), (4, 8, 'd', 270), (6, 10, 'g', 180)],
          (2, 12, 'x'): [(4, 10, 'e', 225)],
          (6, 8, 'f'): [(6, 10, 'g', 90), (4, 8, 'd', 0)],
          (6, 10, 'g'): [(6, 8, 'f', 270), (4, 10, 'e', 0)],
          (1, 7, 'boo'): [(4, 8, 'd', 180)]}

Nodes can be anything that is not one of these characters:

- | / \ v ^ < >

There is one exception (sorry!): If "/" is part of [sometext/foo], then it is not interpreted as an edge. The reason is that I needed this to visualize Git branches and Git history where I needed [origin/somebranch].

Use case

I use it in https://github.com/bast/gitink to create SVG graphics for teaching Git DAGs from plain text files because it is so easy to change a text file and simply generate a new SVG image. This module helps me to obtain a graph representation that I can use somewhere else to generate graphics.