--- title: "Tree-based Plots in NetworkX" date: 2022-01-02T20:36:41-05:00 draft: false tags: ["Python"] math: false --- A graph in D3 and NetworkX can be represented as a JSON file. Example: ```json { "nodes": [ {"id": 1, "name": "A"}, {"id": 2, "name": "B"}, {"id": 3, "name": "C"} ], "links": [ {"source": 1,"target": 2}, {"source": 1,"target": 3} ] } ``` The `nodes` entry in the JSON is a list containing a `node` object. Each `node` object has a unique id and a name which can appear inside the node in the drawing. The `links` entry in the JSON is a list of `link` objects which each denote a (directed) edge between a source and target id. To run the following script you'll need `graphwiz` installed on the system. You'll also need to have the python packages `networkx` and `pydot`. ```python import networkx as nx from networkx.readwrite import json_graph from networkx.drawing.nx_pydot import graphviz_layout import matplotlib.pyplot as plt # Replace graph_json variable with JSON representation of graph graph_json = {"nodes": [{"id": 1, "name": "A"},{"id": 2, "name": "B"}],"links": [{"source":1,"target":2}]} node_labels = {node['id']:node['name'] for node in graph_json['nodes']} for n in graph_json['nodes']: del n['name'] g = json_graph.node_link_graph(graph_json, directed=True, multigraph=False) pos = graphviz_layout(g, prog="dot") nx.draw(g.to_directed(), pos, labels=node_labels, with_labels=True) plt.show() ``` Given the JSON from the top of the post it'll produce: ![image-20220103000837137](/files/images/blog/20220103000837137.png)