doc/lgf.dox
author Balazs Dezso <deba@inf.elte.hu>
Thu, 10 Jul 2008 16:05:56 +0200
changeset 200 c0e2c043c060
parent 162 33247f6fff16
child 201 9757e3d9bfeb
permissions -rw-r--r--
Porting graph_copy_test.cc from SVN 3498
     1 /* -*- C++ -*-
     2  *
     3  * This file is a part of LEMON, a generic C++ optimization library
     4  *
     5  * Copyright (C) 2003-2008
     6  * Egervary Jeno Kombinatorikus Optimalizalasi Kutatocsoport
     7  * (Egervary Research Group on Combinatorial Optimization, EGRES).
     8  *
     9  * Permission to use, modify and distribute this software is granted
    10  * provided that this copyright notice appears in all copies. For
    11  * precise terms see the accompanying LICENSE file.
    12  *
    13  * This software is provided "AS IS" with no warranty of any kind,
    14  * express or implied, and with no claim as to its suitability for any
    15  * purpose.
    16  *
    17  */
    18 
    19 namespace lemon {
    20 /*!
    21 
    22 
    23 
    24 \page lgf-format Lemon Graph Format (LGF)
    25 
    26 The \e LGF is a <em>column oriented</em>
    27 file format for storing graphs and associated data like
    28 node and edge maps.
    29 
    30 Each line with \c '#' first non-whitespace
    31 character is considered as a comment line.
    32 
    33 Otherwise the file consists of sections starting with
    34 a header line. The header lines starts with an \c '@' character followed by the
    35 type of section. The standard section types are \c \@nodes, \c
    36 \@arcs and \c \@edges
    37 and \@attributes. Each header line may also have an optional
    38 \e name, which can be use to distinguish the sections of the same
    39 type.
    40 
    41 The standard sections are column oriented, each line consists of
    42 <em>token</em>s separated by whitespaces. A token can be \e plain or
    43 \e quoted. A plain token is just a sequence of non-whitespace characters,
    44 while a quoted token is a
    45 character sequence surrounded by double quotes, and it can also
    46 contain whitespaces and escape sequences. 
    47 
    48 The \c \@nodes section describes a set of nodes and associated
    49 maps. The first is a header line, its columns are the names of the
    50 maps appearing in the following lines.
    51 One of the maps must be called \c
    52 "label", which plays special role in the file.
    53 The following
    54 non-empty lines until the next section describes nodes of the
    55 graph. Each line contains the values of the node maps
    56 associated to the current node.
    57 
    58 \code
    59  @nodes
    60  label   coordinates size    title
    61  1       (10,20)     10      "First node"
    62  2       (80,80)     8       "Second node"
    63  3       (40,10)     10      "Third node"
    64 \endcode
    65 
    66 The \c \@arcs section is very similar to the \c \@nodes section,
    67 it again starts with a header line describing the names of the maps,
    68 but the \c "label" map is not obligatory here. The following lines
    69 describe the arcs. The first two tokens of each line are
    70 the source and the target node of the arc, respectively, then come the map
    71 values. The source and target tokens must be node labels.
    72 
    73 \code
    74  @arcs
    75  	      capacity
    76  1   2   16
    77  1   3   12
    78  2   3   18
    79 \endcode
    80 
    81 The \c \@edges is just a synonym of \c \@arcs.
    82 
    83 The \c \@attributes section contains key-value pairs, each line
    84 consists of two tokens, an attribute name, and then an attribute value.
    85 
    86 \code
    87  @attributes
    88  source 1
    89  target 3
    90  caption "LEMON test digraph"
    91 \endcode
    92 
    93 The \e LGF can contain extra sections, but there is no restriction on
    94 the format of such sections.
    95 
    96 */
    97 }
    98 
    99 //  LocalWords:  whitespace whitespaces