lemon/nauty_reader.h
author Akos Ladanyi <ladanyi@tmit.bme.hu>
Wed, 05 Nov 2008 14:44:37 +0000
changeset 363 a637fb9d457b
parent 358 636fa2f39f10
child 440 88ed40ad0d4f
permissions -rw-r--r--
Revert to the canonical way of customizing CXXFLAGS

A default list of compiler flags is set via AM_CXXFLAGS Automake variable.
However this gets overridden by per-target CXXFLAGS variables (e.g.
foo_CXXFLAGS in case the foo target). Because of this you should append
$(AM_CXXFLAGS) to the end of the per-target CXXFLAGS variables (e.g.
foo_CXXFLAGS = ... $(AM_CXXFLAGS)).

After this default list of flags the contents of the CXXFLAGS user variable is
passed to the compiler. This variable has a default value determined by
configure (in case of g++ it is '-g -O2'). You can override this by specifying
CXXFLAGS when invoking make (e.g. make CXXFLAGS='-O3').
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/* -*- mode: C++; indent-tabs-mode: nil; -*-
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 *
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 * This file is a part of LEMON, a generic C++ optimization library.
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 *
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 * Copyright (C) 2003-2008
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 * Egervary Jeno Kombinatorikus Optimalizalasi Kutatocsoport
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 * (Egervary Research Group on Combinatorial Optimization, EGRES).
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 *
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 * Permission to use, modify and distribute this software is granted
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 * provided that this copyright notice appears in all copies. For
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 * precise terms see the accompanying LICENSE file.
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 *
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 * This software is provided "AS IS" with no warranty of any kind,
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 * express or implied, and with no claim as to its suitability for any
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 * purpose.
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 *
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 */
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#ifndef LEMON_NAUTY_READER_H
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#define LEMON_NAUTY_READER_H
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#include <vector>
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#include <iostream>
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#include <string>
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/// \ingroup nauty_group
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/// \file
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/// \brief Nauty file reader.
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namespace lemon {
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  /// \ingroup nauty_group
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  ///
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  /// \brief Nauty file reader
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  ///
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  /// The \e geng program is in the \e gtools suite of the nauty
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  /// package. This tool can generate all non-isomorphic undirected
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  /// graphs of several classes with given node number (e.g.
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  /// general, connected, biconnected, triangle-free, 4-cycle-free,
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  /// bipartite and graphs with given edge number and degree
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  /// constraints). This function reads a \e nauty \e graph6 \e format
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  /// line from the given stream and builds it in the given graph.
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  ///
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  /// The site of nauty package: http://cs.anu.edu.au/~bdm/nauty/
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  ///
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  /// For example, the number of all non-isomorphic planar graphs
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  /// can be computed with the following code.
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  ///\code
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  /// int num = 0;
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  /// SmartGraph graph;
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  /// while (readNautyGraph(graph, std::cin)) {
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  ///   PlanarityChecking<SmartGraph> pc(graph);
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  ///   if (pc.run()) ++num;
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  /// }
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  /// std::cout << "Number of planar graphs: " << num << std::endl;
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  ///\endcode
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  ///
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  /// The nauty files are quite huge, therefore instead of the direct
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  /// file generation pipelining is recommended. For example,
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  ///\code
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  /// ./geng -c 10 | ./num_of_planar_graphs
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  ///\endcode
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  template <typename Graph>
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  std::istream& readNautyGraph(Graph& graph, std::istream& is = std::cin) {
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    graph.clear();
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    std::string line;
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    if (getline(is, line)) {
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      int index = 0;
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      int n;
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      if (line[index] == '>') {
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        index += 10;
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      }
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      char c = line[index++]; c -= 63;
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      if (c != 63) {
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        n = int(c);
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      } else {
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        c = line[index++]; c -= 63;
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        n = (int(c) << 12);
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        c = line[index++]; c -= 63;
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        n |= (int(c) << 6);
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        c = line[index++]; c -= 63;
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        n |= int(c);
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      }
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      std::vector<typename Graph::Node> nodes;
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      for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) {
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        nodes.push_back(graph.addNode());
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      }
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      int bit = -1;
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      for (int j = 0; j < n; ++j) {
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        for (int i = 0; i < j; ++i) {
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          if (bit == -1) {
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            c = line[index++]; c -= 63;
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            bit = 5;
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          }
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          bool b = (c & (1 << (bit--))) != 0;
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          if (b) {
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            graph.addEdge(nodes[i], nodes[j]);
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          }
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        }
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      }
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    }
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    return is;
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  }
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}
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#endif