This package facilitates the creation and rendering of graph descriptions in the DOT language of the Graphviz graph drawing software (upstream repo) from Python.
Create a graph object, assemble the graph by adding nodes and edges, and retrieve its DOT source code string. Save the source code to a file and render it with the Graphviz installation of your system.
Use the view
option/method to directly inspect the resulting (PDF, PNG,
SVG, etc.) file with its default application. Graphs can also be rendered
and displayed within Jupyter notebooks (formerly known as
IPython notebooks,
example, nbviewer)
as well as the Jupyter QtConsole.
- GitHub: https://github.com/xflr6/graphviz
- PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/graphviz/
- Documentation: https://graphviz.readthedocs.io
- Changelog: https://graphviz.readthedocs.io/en/latest/changelog.html
- Issue Tracker: https://github.com/xflr6/graphviz/issues
- Download: https://pypi.org/project/graphviz/#files
- Development documentation: https://graphviz.readthedocs.io/en/latest/development.html
- Release process: https://graphviz.readthedocs.io/en/latest/release_process.html
This package runs under Python 3.8+, use pip to install:
$ pip install graphviz
To render the generated DOT source code, you also need to install Graphviz (download page, archived versions, installation procedure for Windows).
Make sure that the directory containing the dot
executable is on your
systems' PATH
(sometimes done by the installer;
setting PATH
on Linux,
Mac,
and Windows).
Anaconda: see the conda-forge package
conda-forge/python-graphviz
(feedstock),
which should automatically conda install
conda-forge/graphviz
(feedstock) as dependency.
Create a graph object:
>>> import graphviz # doctest: +NO_EXE
>>> dot = graphviz.Digraph(comment='The Round Table')
>>> dot #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
<graphviz.graphs.Digraph object at 0x...>
Add nodes and edges:
>>> dot.node('A', 'King Arthur') # doctest: +NO_EXE
>>> dot.node('B', 'Sir Bedevere the Wise')
>>> dot.node('L', 'Sir Lancelot the Brave')
>>> dot.edges(['AB', 'AL'])
>>> dot.edge('B', 'L', constraint='false')
Check the generated source code:
>>> print(dot.source) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE +NO_EXE
// The Round Table
digraph {
A [label="King Arthur"]
B [label="Sir Bedevere the Wise"]
L [label="Sir Lancelot the Brave"]
A -> B
A -> L
B -> L [constraint=false]
}
Save and render the source code (skip/ignore any doctest_mark_exe()
lines):
>>> doctest_mark_exe() # skip this line
>>> dot.render('doctest-output/round-table.gv').replace('\\', '/')
'doctest-output/round-table.gv.pdf'
Save and render and view the result:
>>> doctest_mark_exe() # skip this line
>>> dot.render('doctest-output/round-table.gv', view=True) # doctest: +SKIP
'doctest-output/round-table.gv.pdf'
Caveat:
Backslash-escapes and strings of the form <...>
have a special meaning in the DOT language.
If you need to render arbitrary strings (e.g. from user input),
check the details in the user guide.
- pygraphviz – full-blown interface wrapping the Graphviz C library with SWIG
- graphviz-python – official Python bindings (documentation)
- pydot – stable pure-Python approach, requires pyparsing
This package is distributed under the MIT license.