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networkx

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Create, analyze, and visualize complex networks and graphs in Python with NetworkX. Use when working with network/graph data structures, computing graph algorit

About this skill

NetworkX

Overview

NetworkX is a Python package for creating, manipulating, and analyzing complex networks and graphs. Use this skill when working with network or graph data structures, including social networks, biological networks, transportation systems, citation networks, knowledge graphs, or any system involving relationships between entities.

This skill targets NetworkX 3.x (current stable: 3.6, which requires Python >= 3.11). Several pre-3.0 APIs (nx.info, nx.write_gpickle, nx.read_shp) and the 3.4-era nx.random_tree no longer exist — current replacements are used throughout this skill.

When to Use This Skill

Invoke this skill when tasks involve:

  • Creating graphs: Building network structures from data, adding nodes and edges with attributes
  • Graph analysis: Computing centrality measures, finding shortest paths, detecting communities, measuring clustering
  • Graph algorithms: Running standard algorithms like Dijkstra's, PageRank, minimum spanning trees, maximum flow
  • Network generation: Creating synthetic networks (random, scale-free, small-world models) for testing or simulation
  • Graph I/O: Reading from or writing to various formats (edge lists, GraphML, JSON, CSV, adjacency matrices)
  • Visualization: Drawing and customizing network visualizations with matplotlib or interactive libraries
  • Network comparison: Checking isomorphism, computing graph metrics, analyzing structural properties

Core Capabilities

1. Graph Creation and Manipulation

NetworkX supports four main graph types:

  • Graph: Undirected graphs with single edges
  • DiGraph: Directed graphs with one-way connections
  • MultiGraph: Undirected graphs allowing multiple edges between nodes
  • MultiDiGraph: Directed graphs with multiple edges

Create graphs by:

import networkx as nx

# Create empty graph
G = nx.Graph()

# Add nodes (can be any hashable type)
G.add_node(1)
G.add_nodes_from([2, 3, 4])
G.add_node("protein_A", type='enzyme', weight=1.5)

# Add edges
G.add_edge(1, 2)
G.add_edges_from([(1, 3), (2, 4)])
G.add_edge(1, 4, weight=0.8, relation='interacts')

Reference: See references/graph-basics.md for comprehensive guidance on creating, modifying, examining, and managing graph structures, including working with attributes and subgraphs.

2. Graph Algorithms

NetworkX provides extensive algorithms for network analysis:

Shortest Paths:

# Find shortest path
path = nx.shortest_path(G, source=1, target=5)
length = nx.shortest_path_length(G, source=1, target=5, weight='weight')

Centrality Measures:

# Degree centrality
degree_cent = nx.degree_centrality(G)

# Betweenness centrality
betweenness = nx.betweenness_centrality(G)

# PageRank
pagerank = nx.pagerank(G)

Community Detection:

from networkx.algorithms import community

# Detect communities
communities = community.greedy_modularity_communities(G)

Connectivity:

# Check connectivity
is_connected = nx.is_connected(G)

# Find connected components
components = list(nx.connected_components(G))

Reference: See references/algorithms.md for detailed documentation on all available algorithms including shortest paths, centrality measures, clustering, community detection, flows, matching, tree algorithms, and graph traversal.

3. Graph Generators

Create synthetic networks for testing, simulation, or modeling:

Classic Graphs:

# Complete graph
G = nx.complete_graph(n=10)

# Cycle graph
G = nx.cycle_graph(n=20)

# Known graphs
G = nx.karate_club_graph()
G = nx.petersen_graph()

Random Networks:

# Erdős-Rényi random graph
G = nx.erdos_renyi_graph(n=100, p=0.1, seed=42)

# Barabási-Albert scale-free network
G = nx.barabasi_albert_graph(n=100, m=3, seed=42)

# Watts-Strogatz small-world network
G = nx.watts_strogatz_graph(n=100, k=6, p=0.1, seed=42)

Structured Networks:

# Grid graph
G = nx.grid_2d_graph(m=5, n=7)

# Random tree (random_tree was removed in NetworkX 3.4)
G = nx.random_labeled_tree(100, seed=42)

Reference: See references/generators.md for comprehensive coverage of all graph generators including classic, random, lattice, bipartite, and specialized network models with detailed parameters and use cases.

4. Reading and Writing Graphs

NetworkX supports numerous file formats and data sources:

File Formats:

# Edge list
G = nx.read_edgelist('graph.edgelist')
nx.write_edgelist(G, 'graph.edgelist')

# GraphML (preserves attributes)
G = nx.read_graphml('graph.graphml')
nx.write_graphml(G, 'graph.graphml')

# GML
G = nx.read_gml('graph.gml')
nx.write_gml(G, 'graph.gml')

# JSON (node-link format; edge list is stored under the "edges" key
# since NetworkX 3.6 — older files may use "links", see references/io.md)
data = nx.node_link_data(G)
G = nx.node_link_graph(data)

Pandas Integration:

import pandas as pd

# From DataFrame
df = pd.DataFrame({'source': [1, 2, 3], 'target': [2, 3, 4], 'weight': [0.5, 1.0, 0.75]})
G = nx.from_pandas_edgelist(df, 'source', 'target', edge_attr='weight')

# To DataFrame
df = nx.to_pandas_edgelist(G)

Matrix Formats:

import numpy as np

# Adjacency matrix
A = nx.to_numpy_array(G)
G = nx.from_numpy_array(A)

# Sparse matrix
A = nx.to_scipy_sparse_array(G)
G = nx.from_scipy_sparse_array(A)

Reference: See references/io.md for complete documentation on all I/O formats including CSV, SQL databases, Cytoscape, DOT, and guidance on format selection for different use cases.

5. Visualization

Create clear and informative network visualizations:

Basic Visualization:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

# Simple draw
nx.draw(G, with_labels=True)
plt.show()

# With layout
pos = nx.spring_layout(G, seed=42)
nx.draw(G, pos=pos, with_labels=True, node_color='lightblue', node_size=500)
plt.show()

Customization:

# Color by degree
node_colors = [G.degree(n) for n in G.nodes()]
nx.draw(G, node_color=node_colors, cmap=plt.cm.viridis)

# Size by centrality
centrality = nx.betweenness_centrality(G)
node_sizes = [3000 * centrality[n] for n in G.nodes()]
nx.draw(G, node_size=node_sizes)

# Edge weights
edge_widths = [3 * G[u][v].get('weight', 1) for u, v in G.edges()]
nx.draw(G, width=edge_widths)

Layout Algorithms:

# Spring layout (force-directed)
pos = nx.spring_layout(G, seed=42)

# Circular layout
pos = nx.circular_layout(G)

# Kamada-Kawai layout
pos = nx.kamada_kawai_layout(G)

# Spectral layout
pos = nx.spectral_layout(G)

Publication Quality:

plt.figure(figsize=(12, 8))
pos = nx.spring_layout(G, seed=42)
nx.draw(G, pos=pos, node_color='lightblue', node_size=500,
        edge_color='gray', with_labels=True, font_size=10)
plt.title('Network Visualization', fontsize=16)
plt.axis('off')
plt.tight_layout()
plt.savefig('network.png', dpi=300, bbox_inches='tight')
plt.savefig('network.pdf', bbox_inches='tight')  # Vector format

Reference: See references/visualization.md for extensive documentation on visualization techniques including layout algorithms, customization options, interactive visualizations with Plotly and PyVis, 3D networks, and publication-quality figure creation.

Working with NetworkX

Installation

Ensure NetworkX is installed:

# Check if installed
import networkx as nx
print(nx.__version__)

# Install if needed (via bash)
# uv pip install networkx
# uv pip install networkx[default]  # With optional dependencies

Common Workflow Pattern

Most NetworkX tasks follow this pattern:

  1. Create or Load Graph:

    # From scratch
    G = nx.Graph()
    G.add_edges_from([(1, 2), (2, 3), (3, 4)])
    
    # Or load from file/data
    G = nx.read_edgelist('data.txt')
    
  2. Examine Structure:

    print(f"Nodes: {G.number_of_nodes()}")
    print(f"Edges: {G.number_of_edges()}")
    print(f"Densit
    

Install networkx in Claude Code & Claude Desktop

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Allowed tools

Tools this skill is permitted to call.

No restriction — this skill can use any tool.

Bundled files

references/algorithms.mdreferences/generators.mdreferences/graph-basics.mdreferences/io.mdreferences/visualization.md

FAQ

What does the networkx skill do?

Create, analyze, and visualize complex networks and graphs in Python with NetworkX. Use when working with network/graph data structures, computing graph algorithms (shortest paths, centrality, clustering), detecting communities, generating synthetic networks (random, scale-free, small-world), reading/writing graph file formats, or drawing network topologies. Common applications include social, biological, transportation, and citation networks.

How do I install the networkx skill?

Copy the skill folder into ~/.claude/skills (the Claude Code tab above does this in one command), or install it as a plugin.

Does the networkx skill run scripts?

No, this skill is instructions only (SKILL.md) with no executable scripts.

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