scipy.sparse.csgraph.floyd_warshall#
- scipy.sparse.csgraph.floyd_warshall(csgraph, directed=True, return_predecessors=False, unweighted=False, overwrite=False)#
Compute the shortest path lengths using the Floyd-Warshall algorithm
New in version 0.11.0.
- Parameters:
- csgrapharray, matrix, or sparse matrix, 2 dimensions
The N x N array of distances representing the input graph.
- directedbool, optional
If True (default), then find the shortest path on a directed graph: only move from point i to point j along paths csgraph[i, j]. If False, then find the shortest path on an undirected graph: the algorithm can progress from point i to j along csgraph[i, j] or csgraph[j, i]
- return_predecessorsbool, optional
If True, return the size (N, N) predecesor matrix
- unweightedbool, optional
If True, then find unweighted distances. That is, rather than finding the path between each point such that the sum of weights is minimized, find the path such that the number of edges is minimized.
- overwritebool, optional
If True, overwrite csgraph with the result. This applies only if csgraph is a dense, c-ordered array with dtype=float64.
- Returns:
- dist_matrixndarray
The N x N matrix of distances between graph nodes. dist_matrix[i,j] gives the shortest distance from point i to point j along the graph.
- predecessorsndarray
Returned only if return_predecessors == True. The N x N matrix of predecessors, which can be used to reconstruct the shortest paths. Row i of the predecessor matrix contains information on the shortest paths from point i: each entry predecessors[i, j] gives the index of the previous node in the path from point i to point j. If no path exists between point i and j, then predecessors[i, j] = -9999
- Raises:
- NegativeCycleError:
if there are negative cycles in the graph
Examples
>>> from scipy.sparse import csr_matrix >>> from scipy.sparse.csgraph import floyd_warshall
>>> graph = [ ... [0, 1, 2, 0], ... [0, 0, 0, 1], ... [2, 0, 0, 3], ... [0, 0, 0, 0] ... ] >>> graph = csr_matrix(graph) >>> print(graph) (0, 1) 1 (0, 2) 2 (1, 3) 1 (2, 0) 2 (2, 3) 3
>>> dist_matrix, predecessors = floyd_warshall(csgraph=graph, directed=False, return_predecessors=True) >>> dist_matrix array([[0., 1., 2., 2.], [1., 0., 3., 1.], [2., 3., 0., 3.], [2., 1., 3., 0.]]) >>> predecessors array([[-9999, 0, 0, 1], [ 1, -9999, 0, 1], [ 2, 0, -9999, 2], [ 1, 3, 3, -9999]], dtype=int32)