bubbletools

Tools around the bubble format


Keywords
graph, format, cli, dot, python, usable
License
GPL-2.0+
Install
pip install bubbletools==0.6.11

Documentation

bubble-tools

python routines related to bubble format, usable in CLI or as a library.

Installation

pip install bubbletools

See below for usage.

Features

  • bubble to python
  • bubble to gexf
  • bubble to cytoscape.js
    • working implementation
    • test on fully valid bubble
    • unit testing
    • test on big graphs, for benchmarking (will probably not scale)
  • bubble to dot (via graphviz)
    • working implementation
    • test on fully valid bubble
    • unit testing
    • test on big graphs, for benchmarking (will probably not scale)
  • python to bubble
  • dot to python
  • unit testing on bubble describing cliques

CLI

bubbletools is usable through CLI.

validation

usage:

python3 -m bubbletools validate path/to/bubble/file

Try hard to find errors and inconsistancies in the given bubble file

Spot powernode overlapping, inclusions inconsistancies and empty or singleton powernodes. Profiling gives general informations about the file data.

conversion to dot

usage:

python3 bubbletool.py dot path/to/bubble/file path/to/output/file

Convert given bubble file in dot format. The optional --render flag can be used to show the graph after saving.

Same API is available for gexf format.

conversion to cytoscape.js

usage:

python3 -m bubbletools js path/to/bubble/file path/to/output/dir

Convert given bubble file in a fully working website using cytoscape.js to render the graph. The optional --render flag can be used to run the default web browser on the generated website. See Makefile recipe js for a usage example.

A website is a collection of files (css, js, html), with only one of them (js/graph.js) that changes according to the input data.

If the path/to/output/dir has a .js extension, only the js/graph.js file will be generated. This allow one to generates only the changing parts, not the full website each time. See Makefile recipe js-per-file for a usage example.

python API

Submodules validator and converter provides the functionnalities described above for CLI:

from bubbletools import validate, convert

for log in validate(open('path/to/bubble.lp'), profiling=True):
    print(log)
convert.to_dot(open('path/to/bubble.lp'), dotfile='path/to/dot.dot')

python representation of the graph

A lower level interface is the BubbleTree object, allowing one to manipulate the graph depicted by bubble data as python object. See unit tests for example of BubbleTree usage.

from bubbletools import BubbleTree

tree = BubbleTree.from_bubble_file('path/to/bubble.lp')
print(tree.edges, tree.inclusions, tree.roots)

edges is a mapping predecessor -> set of successors, inclusions is a mapping (power)node -> set of (power)nodes directly contained, and roots is a set of (power)nodes that are contained by nothing.

This representation holds all the data necessary for most work on the bubble. The BubbleTree.connected_components function maps a graph with its connected components:

cc, subroots = BubbleTree.connected_components()

Where cc and subroots are both mappings, respectively linking the root of a connected component with all nodes of the connected component, and the root of a connected component with the other roots of the same connected component. Thus, connected components are identified by one of their roots, which is key is both dictionaries.

access powernodes and their data

Follow an example of BubbleTree usage, retrieving data on powernodes:

tree = BubbleTree.from_bubble_file('bubbles/basic.bbl')
for pnode in tree.powernodes:
    data = tree.powernode_data(pnode)
    print(
        "{} contains nodes {{{}}}, and powernodes {{{}}}."
        "".format(pnode, data.contained_nodes, data.contained_pnodes)
    )