| 1 | namespace lemon { | 
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| 2 | /*! | 
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| 3 |  | 
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| 4 |  | 
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| 5 | \page graph-io-page Graph Input-Output | 
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| 6 |  | 
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| 7 | The standard graph IO enables one to store graphs and additional maps | 
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| 8 | (i.e. functions on the nodes or edges) in a flexible and efficient way. | 
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| 9 | Before you read this page you should be familiar with LEMON | 
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| 10 | \ref graphs "graphs" and \ref maps-page "maps". | 
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| 11 |  | 
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| 12 | \section format The general file format | 
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| 13 |  | 
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| 14 | The file contains sections in the following order: | 
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| 15 |  | 
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| 16 | \li nodeset | 
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| 17 | \li edgeset | 
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| 18 | \li nodes | 
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| 19 | \li edges | 
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| 20 | \li attributes | 
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| 21 |  | 
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| 22 | Some of these sections can be omitted, but you will basicly need the nodeset | 
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| 23 | section (unless your graph has no nodes at all) and the edgeset section | 
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| 24 | (unless your graph has no edges at all). | 
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| 25 |  | 
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| 26 | The nodeset section describes the nodes of your graph: it identifies the nodes | 
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| 27 | and gives the maps defined on them, if any. It starts with the | 
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| 28 | following line: | 
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| 29 |  | 
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| 30 | <tt>\@nodeset</tt> | 
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| 31 |  | 
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| 32 | The next line contains the names of the nodemaps, separated by whitespaces.  Each | 
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| 33 | following line describes a node in the graph: it contains the values of the | 
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| 34 | maps in the right order. The map named "id" should contain unique values | 
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| 35 | because it is regarded as an ID-map. These ids need not be numbers but they | 
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| 36 | must identify the nodes uniquely for later reference. For example: | 
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| 37 |  | 
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| 38 | \code | 
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| 39 | @nodeset | 
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| 40 | id  x-coord  y-coord  color | 
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| 41 | 3   1.0      4.0      blue | 
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| 42 | 5   2.3      5.7      red | 
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| 43 | 12  7.8      2.3      green | 
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| 44 | \endcode | 
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| 45 |  | 
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| 46 | The edgeset section is very similar to the nodeset section, it has | 
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| 47 | the same coloumn oriented structure. It starts with the line | 
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| 48 |  | 
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| 49 | <tt>\@edgeset</tt> | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | The next line contains the whitespace separated list of names of the edge | 
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| 52 | maps.  Each of the next lines describes one edge. The first two elements in | 
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| 53 | the line are the IDs of the source and target (or tail and head) nodes of the | 
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| 54 | edge as they occur in the ID node map of the nodeset section. You can also | 
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| 55 | have an optional ID map on the edges for later reference (which has to be | 
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| 56 | unique in this case). | 
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| 57 |  | 
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| 58 | \code | 
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| 59 | @edgeset | 
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| 60 | id    weight   label | 
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| 61 | 3   5        a     4.3      a-edge | 
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| 62 | 5   12       c     2.6      c-edge | 
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| 63 | 3   12       g     3.4      g-edge | 
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| 64 | \endcode | 
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| 65 |  | 
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| 66 | The \e nodes section contains <em>labeled (distinguished) nodes</em> | 
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| 67 | (i.e. nodes having a special | 
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| 68 | label on them). The section starts with | 
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| 69 |  | 
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| 70 | <tt> \@nodes </tt> | 
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| 71 |  | 
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| 72 | Each of the next lines contains a label for a node in the graph | 
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| 73 | and then the ID as described in the \e nodeset section. | 
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| 74 |  | 
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| 75 | \code | 
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| 76 | @nodes | 
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| 77 | source 3 | 
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| 78 | target 12 | 
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| 79 | \endcode | 
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| 80 |  | 
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| 81 | The last section describes the <em>labeled (distinguished) edges</em> | 
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| 82 | (i.e. edges having a special label on them). It starts with \c \@edges | 
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| 83 | and then each line contains the name of the edge and the ID. | 
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| 84 |  | 
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| 85 | \code | 
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| 86 | @edges | 
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| 87 | observed c | 
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| 88 | \endcode | 
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| 89 |  | 
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| 90 |  | 
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| 91 | The file may contain empty lines and comment lines. The comment lines | 
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| 92 | start with an \c # character. | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 | The attributes section can handle some information about the graph. It | 
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| 95 | contains key-value pairs in each line (a key and the mapped value to key). The | 
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| 96 | key should be a string without whitespaces, the value can be of various types. | 
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| 97 |  | 
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| 98 | \code | 
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| 99 | @attributes | 
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| 100 | title "Four colored plan graph" | 
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| 101 | author "Balazs DEZSO" | 
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| 102 | copyright "Lemon Library" | 
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| 103 | version 12 | 
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| 104 | \endcode | 
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| 105 |  | 
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| 106 | <tt> \@end </tt> | 
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| 107 |  | 
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| 108 | line. | 
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| 109 |  | 
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| 110 |  | 
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| 111 | \section use Using graph input-output | 
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| 112 |  | 
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| 113 |  | 
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| 114 | The graph input and output is based on <em> reading and writing | 
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| 115 | commands</em>. The user gives reading and writing commands to the reader or | 
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| 116 | writer class, then he calls the \c run() method that executes all the given | 
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| 117 | commands. | 
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| 118 |  | 
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| 119 | \subsection write Writing a graph | 
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| 120 |  | 
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| 121 | The \ref lemon::GraphWriter "GraphWriter" template class | 
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| 122 | provides the graph output. To write a graph | 
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| 123 | you should first give writing commands to the writer. You can declare | 
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| 124 | writing command as \c NodeMap or \c EdgeMap writing and labeled Node and | 
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| 125 | Edge writing. | 
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| 126 |  | 
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| 127 | \code | 
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| 128 | GraphWriter<ListGraph> writer(std::cout, graph); | 
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| 129 | \endcode | 
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| 130 |  | 
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| 131 | The \ref lemon::GraphWriter::writeNodeMap() "writeNodeMap()" | 
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| 132 | function declares a \c NodeMap writing command in the | 
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| 133 | \ref lemon::GraphWriter "GraphWriter". | 
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| 134 | You should give a name to the map and the map | 
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| 135 | object as parameters. The NodeMap writing command with name "id" should write a | 
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| 136 | unique map because it will be regarded as an ID map. | 
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| 137 |  | 
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| 138 | \see IdMap, DescriptorMap | 
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| 139 |  | 
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| 140 | \code | 
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| 141 | IdMap<ListGraph, Node> nodeIdMap; | 
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| 142 | writer.writeNodeMap("id", nodeIdMap); | 
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| 143 |  | 
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| 144 | writer.writeNodeMap("x-coord", xCoordMap); | 
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| 145 | writer.writeNodeMap("y-coord", yCoordMap); | 
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| 146 | writer.writeNodeMap("color", colorMap); | 
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| 147 | \endcode | 
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| 148 |  | 
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| 149 | With the \ref lemon::GraphWriter::writeEdgeMap() "writeEdgeMap()" | 
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| 150 | member function you can give an edge map | 
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| 151 | writing command similar to the NodeMaps. | 
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| 152 |  | 
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| 153 | \see IdMap, DescriptorMap | 
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| 154 |  | 
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| 155 | \code | 
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| 156 | DescriptorMap<ListGraph, Edge, ListGraph::EdgeMap<int> > edgeDescMap(graph); | 
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| 157 | writer.writeEdgeMap("descriptor", edgeDescMap); | 
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| 158 |  | 
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| 159 | writer.writeEdgeMap("weight", weightMap); | 
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| 160 | writer.writeEdgeMap("label", labelMap); | 
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| 161 | \endcode | 
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| 162 |  | 
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| 163 | With \ref lemon::GraphWriter::writeNode() "writeNode()" | 
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| 164 | and \ref lemon::GraphWriter::writeEdge() "writeEdge()" | 
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| 165 | functions you can designate Nodes and | 
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| 166 | Edges in the graph. For example, you can write out the source and target node | 
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| 167 | of a maximum flow instance. | 
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| 168 |  | 
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| 169 | \code | 
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| 170 | writer.writeNode("source", sourceNode); | 
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| 171 | writer.writeNode("target", targetNode); | 
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| 172 |  | 
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| 173 | writer.writeEdge("observed", edge); | 
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| 174 | \endcode | 
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| 175 |  | 
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| 176 | With \ref lemon::GraphWriter::writeAttribute() "writeAttribute()" | 
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| 177 | function you can write an attribute to the file. | 
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| 178 |  | 
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| 179 | \code | 
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| 180 | writer.writeAttribute("author", "Balazs DEZSO"); | 
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| 181 | writer.writeAttribute("version", 12); | 
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| 182 | \endcode | 
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| 183 |  | 
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| 184 | After you give all write commands you must call the | 
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| 185 | \ref lemon::GraphWriter::run() "run()" member | 
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| 186 | function, which executes all the writing commands. | 
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| 187 |  | 
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| 188 | \code | 
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| 189 | writer.run(); | 
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| 190 | \endcode | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 | \subsection reading Reading a graph | 
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| 193 |  | 
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| 194 | The file to be read may contain several maps and labeled nodes or edges. | 
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| 195 | If you read a graph you need not read all the maps and items just those | 
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| 196 | that you need. The interface of the \ref lemon::GraphReader "GraphReader" | 
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| 197 | is very similar to | 
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| 198 | the \ref lemon::GraphWriter "GraphWriter" | 
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| 199 | but the reading method does not depend on the order of the | 
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| 200 | given commands. | 
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| 201 |  | 
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| 202 | The reader object assumes that each not readed value does not contain | 
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| 203 | whitespaces, therefore it has some extra possibilities to control how | 
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| 204 | it should skip the values when the string representation contains spaces. | 
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| 205 |  | 
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| 206 | \code | 
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| 207 | GraphReader<ListGraph> reader(std::cin, graph); | 
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| 208 | \endcode | 
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| 209 |  | 
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| 210 | The \ref lemon::GraphReader::readNodeMap() "readNodeMap()" | 
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| 211 | function reads a map from the \c nodeset section. | 
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| 212 | If there is a map that you do not want to read from the file and there are | 
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| 213 | whitespaces in the string represenation of the values then you should | 
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| 214 | call the \ref lemon::GraphReader::skipNodeMap() "skipNodeMap()" | 
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| 215 | template member function with proper parameters. | 
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| 216 |  | 
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| 217 | \see QuotedStringReader | 
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| 218 |  | 
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| 219 | \code | 
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| 220 | reader.readNodeMap("x-coord", xCoordMap); | 
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| 221 | reader.readNodeMap("y-coord", yCoordMap); | 
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| 222 |  | 
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| 223 | reader.readNodeMap<QuotedStringReader>("label", labelMap); | 
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| 224 | reader.skipNodeMap<QuotedStringReader>("description"); | 
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| 225 |  | 
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| 226 | reader.readNodeMap("color", colorMap); | 
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| 227 | \endcode | 
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| 228 |  | 
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| 229 | With the \ref lemon::GraphReader::readEdgeMap() "readEdgeMap()" | 
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| 230 | member function you can give an edge map | 
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| 231 | reading command similar to the NodeMaps. | 
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| 232 |  | 
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| 233 | \code | 
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| 234 | reader.readEdgeMap("weight", weightMap); | 
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| 235 | reader.readEdgeMap("label", labelMap); | 
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| 236 | \endcode | 
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| 237 |  | 
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| 238 | With \ref lemon::GraphReader::readNode() "readNode()" | 
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| 239 | and \ref lemon::GraphReader::readEdge() "readEdge()" | 
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| 240 | functions you can read labeled Nodes and | 
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| 241 | Edges. | 
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| 242 |  | 
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| 243 | \code | 
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| 244 | reader.readNode("source", sourceNode); | 
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| 245 | reader.readNode("target", targetNode); | 
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| 246 |  | 
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| 247 | reader.readEdge("observed", edge); | 
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| 248 | \endcode | 
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| 249 |  | 
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| 250 | With \ref lemon::GraphReader::readAttribute() "readAttribute()" | 
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| 251 | function you can read an attribute from the file. | 
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| 252 |  | 
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| 253 | \code | 
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| 254 | std::string author; | 
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| 255 | writer.readAttribute("author", author); | 
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| 256 | int version; | 
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| 257 | writer.writeAttribute("version", version); | 
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| 258 | \endcode | 
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| 259 |  | 
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| 260 | After you give all read commands you must call the | 
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| 261 | \ref lemon::GraphReader::run() "run()" member | 
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| 262 | function, which executes all the commands. | 
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| 263 |  | 
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| 264 | \code | 
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| 265 | reader.run(); | 
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| 266 | \endcode | 
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| 267 |  | 
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| 268 | \anchor rwbackground | 
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| 269 | \section types Background of Reading and Writing | 
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| 270 |  | 
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| 271 |  | 
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| 272 | To read a map (on the nodes or edges) | 
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| 273 | the \ref lemon::GraphReader "GraphReader" | 
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| 274 | should know how to read a Value from the given map. | 
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| 275 | By the default implementation the input operator reads a value from | 
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| 276 | the stream and the type of the readed value is the value type of the given map. | 
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| 277 | When the reader should skip a value in the stream, because you do not | 
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| 278 | want to store it in a map, the reader skips a character sequence without | 
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| 279 | whitespaces. | 
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| 280 |  | 
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| 281 | If you want to change the functionality of the reader, you can use | 
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| 282 | template parameters to specialize it. When you give a reading | 
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| 283 | command for a map you can give a Reader type as template parameter. | 
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| 284 | With this template parameter you can control how the Reader reads | 
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| 285 | a value from the stream. | 
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| 286 |  | 
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| 287 | The reader has the next structure: | 
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| 288 | \code | 
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| 289 | struct TypeReader { | 
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| 290 | typedef TypeName Value; | 
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| 291 |  | 
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| 292 | void read(std::istream& is, Value& value); | 
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| 293 | }; | 
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| 294 | \endcode | 
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| 295 |  | 
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| 296 | For example, the \c "strings" nodemap contains strings and you do not need | 
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| 297 | the value of the string just the length. Then you can implement an own Reader | 
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| 298 | struct. | 
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| 299 |  | 
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| 300 | \code | 
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| 301 | struct LengthReader { | 
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| 302 | typedef int Value; | 
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| 303 |  | 
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| 304 | void read(std::istream& is, Value& value) { | 
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| 305 | std::string tmp; | 
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| 306 | is >> tmp; | 
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| 307 | value = tmp.length(); | 
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| 308 | } | 
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| 309 | }; | 
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| 310 | ... | 
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| 311 | reader.readNodeMap<LengthReader>("strings", lengthMap); | 
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| 312 | \endcode | 
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| 313 |  | 
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| 314 | The global functionality of the reader class can be changed by giving a | 
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| 315 | special template parameter to the GraphReader class. By default, the | 
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| 316 | template parameter is \c DefaultReaderTraits. A reader traits class | 
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| 317 | should provide an inner template class Reader for each type, and a | 
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| 318 | DefaultReader for skipping a value. | 
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| 319 |  | 
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| 320 | The specialization of  writing is very similar to that of reading. | 
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| 321 |  | 
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| 322 | \section undir Undirected graphs | 
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| 323 |  | 
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| 324 | In a file describing an undirected graph (undir graph, for short) you find an | 
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| 325 | \c undiredgeset section instead of the \c edgeset section. The first line of | 
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| 326 | the section describes the names of the maps on the undirected egdes and all | 
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| 327 | next lines describe one undirected edge with the the incident nodes and the | 
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| 328 | values of the map. | 
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| 329 |  | 
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| 330 | The format handles directed edge maps as a syntactical sugar???, if there | 
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| 331 | are two maps with names being the same with a \c '+' and a \c '-' prefix | 
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| 332 | then this will be read as a directed map. | 
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| 333 |  | 
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| 334 | \code | 
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| 335 | @undiredgeset | 
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| 336 | id    capacity +flow -flow | 
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| 337 | 32   2       1     4.3      2.0   0.0 | 
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| 338 | 21   21      5     2.6      0.0   2.6 | 
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| 339 | 21   12      8     3.4      0.0   0.0 | 
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| 340 | \endcode | 
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| 341 |  | 
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| 342 | The \c edges section is changed to \c undiredges section. This section | 
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| 343 | describes labeled edges and undirected edges. The directed edge label | 
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| 344 | should start with a \c '+' or a \c '-' prefix to decide the direction | 
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| 345 | of the edge. | 
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| 346 |  | 
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| 347 | \code | 
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| 348 | @undiredges | 
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| 349 | undiredge 1 | 
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| 350 | +edge 5 | 
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| 351 | -back 5 | 
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| 352 | \endcode | 
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| 353 |  | 
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| 354 | There are similar classes to the \ref lemon::GraphReader "GraphReader" and | 
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| 355 | \ref lemon::GraphWriter "GraphWriter" which | 
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| 356 | handle the undirected graphs. These classes are | 
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| 357 | the \ref lemon::UndirGraphReader "UndirGraphReader" | 
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| 358 | and \ref lemon::UndirGraphWriter "UndirGraphWriter". | 
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| 359 |  | 
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| 360 | The \ref lemon::UndirGraphReader::readUndirEdgeMap() "readUndirEdgeMap()" | 
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| 361 | function reads an undirected map and the | 
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| 362 | \ref lemon::UndirGraphReader::readUndirEdge() "readUndirEdge()" | 
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| 363 | reads an undirected edge from the file, | 
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| 364 |  | 
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| 365 | \code | 
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| 366 | reader.readUndirEdgeMap("capacity", capacityMap); | 
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| 367 | reader.readEdgeMap("flow", flowMap); | 
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| 368 | ... | 
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| 369 | reader.readUndirEdge("undir_edge", undir_edge); | 
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| 370 | reader.readEdge("edge", edge); | 
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| 371 | \endcode | 
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| 372 |  | 
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| 373 | \section advanced Advanced features | 
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| 374 |  | 
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| 375 | The graph reader and writer classes give an easy way to read and write | 
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| 376 | graphs. But sometimes we want more advanced features. In this case we can | 
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| 377 | use the more general <tt>lemon reader and writer</tt> interface. | 
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| 378 |  | 
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| 379 | The LEMON file format is a section oriented file format. It contains one or | 
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| 380 | more sections, each starting with a line identifying its type | 
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| 381 | (the word starting with the \c \@  character). | 
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| 382 | The content of the section this way cannot contain line with \c \@ first | 
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| 383 | character. The file may contains comment lines with \c # first character. | 
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| 384 |  | 
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| 385 | The \ref lemon::LemonReader "LemonReader" | 
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| 386 | and \ref lemon::LemonWriter "LemonWriter" | 
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| 387 | gives a framework to read and | 
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| 388 | write sections. There are various section reader and section writer | 
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| 389 | classes which can be attached to a \ref lemon::LemonReader "LemonReader" | 
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| 390 | or a \ref lemon::LemonWriter "LemonWriter". | 
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| 391 |  | 
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| 392 | There are default section readers and writers for reading and writing | 
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| 393 | item sets, and labeled items in the graph. These read and write | 
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| 394 | the format described above. Other type of data can be handled with own | 
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| 395 | section reader and writer classes which are inherited from the | 
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| 396 | \c LemonReader::SectionReader or the | 
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| 397 | \ref lemon::LemonWriter::SectionWriter "LemonWriter::SectionWriter" | 
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| 398 | classes. | 
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| 399 |  | 
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| 400 | The next example defines a special section reader which reads the | 
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| 401 | \c \@description sections into a string: | 
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| 402 |  | 
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| 403 | \code | 
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| 404 | class DescriptionReader : LemonReader::SectionReader { | 
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| 405 | protected: | 
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| 406 | virtual bool header(const std::string& line) { | 
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| 407 | std::istringstream ls(line); | 
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| 408 | std::string head; | 
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| 409 | ls >> head; | 
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| 410 | return head == "@description"; | 
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| 411 | } | 
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| 412 |  | 
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| 413 | virtual void read(std::istream& is) { | 
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| 414 | std::string line; | 
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| 415 | while (getline(is, line)) { | 
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| 416 | desc += line; | 
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| 417 | } | 
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| 418 | } | 
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| 419 | public: | 
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| 420 |  | 
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| 421 | typedef LemonReader::SectionReader Parent; | 
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| 422 |  | 
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| 423 | DescriptionReader(LemonReader& reader) : Parent(reader) {} | 
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| 424 |  | 
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| 425 | const std::string& description() const { | 
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| 426 | return description; | 
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| 427 | } | 
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| 428 |  | 
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| 429 | private: | 
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| 430 | std::string desc; | 
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| 431 | }; | 
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| 432 | \endcode | 
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| 433 |  | 
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| 434 | The other advanced stuff of the generalized file format is that | 
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| 435 | multiple edgesets can be stored to the same nodeset. It can be used | 
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| 436 | for example as a network traffic matrix. | 
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| 437 |  | 
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| 438 | In our example there is a network with symmetric links and there are assymetric | 
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| 439 | traffic request on the network. This construction can be stored in an | 
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| 440 | undirected graph and in a directed \c NewEdgeSetAdaptor class. The example | 
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| 441 | shows the input with the \ref lemon::LemonReader "LemonReader" class: | 
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| 442 |  | 
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| 443 | \code | 
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| 444 | UndirListGraph network; | 
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| 445 | UndirListGraph::UndirEdgeSet<double> capacity; | 
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| 446 | NewEdgeSetAdaptor<UndirListGraph> traffic(network); | 
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| 447 | NewEdgeSetAdaptor<UndirListGraph>::EdgeSet<double> request(network); | 
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| 448 |  | 
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| 449 | LemonReader reader(std::cin); | 
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| 450 | NodeSetReader nodesetReader(reader, network); | 
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| 451 | UndirEdgeSetReader undirEdgesetReader(reader, network, nodesetReader); | 
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| 452 | undirEdgesetReader.readEdgeMap("capacity", capacity); | 
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| 453 | EdgeSetReader edgesetReader(reader, traffic, nodesetReader); | 
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| 454 | edgesetReader.readEdgeMap("request", request); | 
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| 455 |  | 
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| 456 | reader.run(); | 
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| 457 | \endcode | 
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| 458 |  | 
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| 459 | Because both the \ref lemon::GraphReader "GraphReader" | 
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| 460 | and the \ref lemon::UndirGraphReader "UndirGraphReader" can be converted | 
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| 461 | to \ref lemon::LemonReader "LemonReader" | 
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| 462 | and it can resolve the ID's of the items, the previous | 
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| 463 | result can be achived with the \ref lemon::UndirGraphReader "UndirGraphReader" | 
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| 464 | class, too. | 
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| 465 |  | 
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| 466 |  | 
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| 467 | \code | 
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| 468 | UndirListGraph network; | 
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| 469 | UndirListGraph::UndirEdgeSet<double> capacity; | 
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| 470 | NewEdgeSetAdaptor<UndirListGraph> traffic(network); | 
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| 471 | NewEdgeSetAdaptor<UndirListGraph>::EdgeSet<double> request(network); | 
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| 472 |  | 
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| 473 | UndirGraphReader reader(std::cin, network); | 
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| 474 | reader.readEdgeMap("capacity", capacity); | 
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| 475 | EdgeSetReader edgesetReader(reader, traffic, reader); | 
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| 476 | edgesetReader.readEdgeMap("request", request); | 
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| 477 |  | 
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| 478 | reader.run(); | 
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| 479 | \endcode | 
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| 480 |  | 
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| 481 | \author Balazs Dezso | 
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| 482 | */ | 
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| 483 | } | 
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