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python-graphblas
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NetworkX | python-graphblas | |
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61 | 4 | |
14,153 | 112 | |
1.1% | 8.0% | |
9.6 | 8.0 | |
1 day ago | 18 days ago | |
Python | Jupyter Notebook | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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NetworkX
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Routes to LANL from 186 sites on the Internet
Built from this data... https://github.com/networkx/networkx/blob/main/examples/grap...
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The Hunt for the Missing Data Type
I think one of the elements that author is missing here is that graphs are sparse matrices, and thus can be expressed with Linear Algebra. They mention adjacency matrices, but not sparse adjacency matrices, or incidence matrices (which can express muti and hypergraphs).
Linear Algebra is how almost all academic graph theory is expressed, and large chunks of machine learning and AI research are expressed in this language as well. There was recent thread here about PageRank and how it's really an eigenvector problem over a matrix, and the reality is, all graphs are matrices, they're typically sparse ones.
One question you might ask is, why would I do this? Why not just write my graph algorithms as a function that traverses nodes and edges? And one of the big answers is, parallelism. How are you going to do it? Fork a thread at each edge? Use a thread pool? What if you want to do it on CUDA too? Now you have many problems. How do you know how to efficiently schedule work? By treating graph traversal as a matrix multiplication, you just say Ax = b, and let the library figure it out on the specific hardware you want to target.
Here for example is a recent question on the NetworkX repo for how to find the boundary of a triangular mesh, it's one single line of GraphBLAS if you consider the graph as a matrix:
https://github.com/networkx/networkx/discussions/7326
This brings a very powerful language to the table, Linear Algebra. A language spoken by every scientist, engineer, mathematician and researcher on the planet. By treating graphs like matrices graph algorithms become expressible as mathematical formulas. For example, neural networks are graphs of adjacent layers, and the operation used to traverse from layer to layer is matrix multiplication. This generalizes to all matrices.
There is a lot of very new and powerful research and development going on around sparse graphs with linear algebra in the GraphBLAS API standard, and it's best reference implementation, SuiteSparse:GraphBLAS:
https://github.com/DrTimothyAldenDavis/GraphBLAS
SuiteSparse provides a highly optimized, parallel and CPU/GPU supported sparse Matrix Multiplication. This is relevant because traversing graph edges IS matrix multiplication when you realize that graphs are matrices.
Recently NetworkX has grown the ability to have different "graph engine" backends, and one of the first to be developed uses the python-graphblas library that binds to SuiteSparse. I'm not a directly contributor to that particular work but as I understand it there has been great results.
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Build the dependency graph of your BigQuery pipelines at no cost: a Python implementation
In the project we used Python lib networkx and a DiGraph object (Direct Graph). To detect a table reference in a Query, we use sqlglot, a SQL parser (among other things) that works well with Bigquery.
- NetworkX – Network Analysis in Python
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Custom libraries and utility tools for challenges
If you program in Python, can use NetworkX for that. But it's probably a good idea to implement the basic algorithms yourself at least one time.
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Google open-sources their graph mining library
For those wanting to play with graphs and ML I was browsing the arangodb docs recently and I saw that it includes integrations to various graph libraries and machine learning frameworks [1]. I also saw a few jupyter notebooks dealing with machine learning from graphs [2].
Integrations include:
* NetworkX -- https://networkx.org/
* DeepGraphLibrary -- https://www.dgl.ai/
* cuGraph (Rapids.ai Graph) -- https://docs.rapids.ai/api/cugraph/stable/
* PyG (PyTorch Geometric) -- https://pytorch-geometric.readthedocs.io/en/latest/
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1: https://docs.arangodb.com/3.11/data-science/adapters/
2: https://github.com/arangodb/interactive_tutorials#machine-le...
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org-roam-pygraph: Build a graph of your org-roam collection for use in Python
org-roam-ui is a great interactive visualization tool, but its main use is visualization. The hope of this library is that it could be part of a larger graph analysis pipeline. The demo provides an example graph visualization, but what you choose to do with the resulting graph certainly isn't limited to that. See for example networkx.
python-graphblas
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What can I contribute to SciPy (or other) with my pure math skill? I’m pen and paper mathematician
Core Python library python-graphblas is here: https://github.com/python-graphblas/python-graphblas
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NetworkX 3.0
Great talk!
This slide shows some speedups when using the GraphBLAS [1] backend [2]:
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GraphBLAS
GraphBLAS is underrated and underused IMHO. If you use e.g. scipy.sparse, NetworkX, or similar, you should check out GraphBLAS. It is really fast even compared to scipy.sparse, and more capable in many ways.
They've actually started implementing the NetworkX API
https://github.com/python-graphblas/graphblas-algorithms
with python-graphblas
What are some alternatives?
Numba - NumPy aware dynamic Python compiler using LLVM
cugraph - cuGraph - RAPIDS Graph Analytics Library
Dask - Parallel computing with task scheduling
CyRK - Runge-Kutta ODE Integrator Implemented in Cython and Numba
julia - The Julia Programming Language
egsis - EGSIS: Exploratory Graph-based Semi-supervised Image Segmentation
RDKit - The official sources for the RDKit library
snap - Stanford Network Analysis Platform (SNAP) is a general purpose network analysis and graph mining library.
SymPy - A computer algebra system written in pure Python
Interactive Parallel Computing with IPython - IPython Parallel: Interactive Parallel Computing in Python
networkit - NetworKit is a growing open-source toolkit for large-scale network analysis.
Pandas - Flexible and powerful data analysis / manipulation library for Python, providing labeled data structures similar to R data.frame objects, statistical functions, and much more