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Graph::Easy::Edge(3)  User Contributed Perl Documentation Graph::Easy::Edge(3)

NAME
       Graph::Easy::Edge - An edge (a path connecting one ore more nodes)

SYNOPSIS
	       use Graph::Easy;

	       my $ssl = Graph::Easy::Edge->new(
		       label => 'encrypted connection',
		       style => 'solid',
	       );
	       $ssl->set_attribute('color', 'red');

	       my $src = Graph::Easy::Node->new('source');

	       my $dst = Graph::Easy::Node->new('destination');

	       $graph = Graph::Easy->new();

	       $graph->add_edge($src, $dst, $ssl);

	       print $graph->as_ascii();

DESCRIPTION
       A "Graph::Easy::Edge" represents an edge between two (or more) nodes in
       a simple graph.

       Each edge has a direction (from source to destination, or back and
       forth), plus a style (line width and style), colors etc. It can also
       have a label, e.g. a text associated with it.

       During the layout phase, each edge also contains a list of path-
       elements (also called cells), which make up the path from source to
       destination.

METHODS
   error()
	       $last_error = $edge->error();

	       $cvt->error($error);		       # set new messags
	       $cvt->error('');			       # clear error

       Returns the last error message, or '' for no error.

   as_ascii()
	       my $ascii = $edge->as_ascii();

       Returns the edge as a little ascii representation.

   as_txt()
	       my $txt = $edge->as_txt();

       Returns the edge as a little Graph::Easy textual representation.

   label()
	       my $label = $edge->label();

       Returns the label (also known as 'name') of the edge.

   name()
	       my $label = $edge->name();

       To make the interface more consistent, the "name()" method of an edge
       can also be called, and it will returned either the edge label, or the
       empty string if the edge doesn't have a label.

   style()
	       my $style = $edge->style();

       Returns the style of the edge, like 'solid', 'dotted', 'double', etc.

   nodes()
	       my @nodes = $edge->nodes();

       Returns the source and target node that this edges connects as objects.

   bidirectional()
	       $edge->bidirectional(1);
	       if ($edge->bidirectional())
		 {
		 }

       Returns true if the edge is bidirectional, aka has arrow heads on both
       ends.  An optional parameter will set the bidirectional status of the
       edge.

   undirected()
	       $edge->undirected(1);
	       if ($edge->undirected())
		 {
		 }

       Returns true if the edge is undirected, aka has now arrow at all.  An
       optional parameter will set the undirected status of the edge.

   has_ports()
	       if ($edge->has_ports())
		 {
		 ...
		 }

       Return true if the edge has restriction on the starting or ending port,
       e.g. either the "start" or "end" attribute is set on this edge.

   start_port()
	       my $port = $edge->start_port();

       Return undef if the edge does not have a fixed start port, otherwise
       returns the port as "side, number", for example "south, 0".

   end_port()
	       my $port = $edge->end_port();

       Return undef if the edge does not have a fixed end port, otherwise
       returns the port as "side, number", for example "south, 0".

   from()
	       my $from = $edge->from();

       Returns the node that this edge starts at. See also "to()".

   to()
	       my $to = $edge->to();

       Returns the node that this edge leads to. See also "from()".

   start_at()
	       $edge->start_at($other);
	       my $other = $edge->start_at('some node');

       Set the edge's start point to the given node. If given a node name,
       will add that node to the graph first.

       Returns the new edge start point node.

   end_at()
	       $edge->end_at($other);
	       my $other = $edge->end_at('some other node');

       Set the edge's end point to the given node. If given a node name, will
       add that node to the graph first.

       Returns the new edge end point node.

   flip()
	       $edge->flip();

       Swaps the "start" and "end" nodes on this edge, e.g. reverses the
       direction of the edge.

   flow()
	       my $flow = $edge->flow();

       Returns the flow for this edge, honoring inheritance. An edge without a
       specific flow set will inherit the flow from the node it comes from.

   edge_flow()
	       my $flow = $edge->edge_flow();

       Returns the flow for this edge, or undef if it has none set on either
       the object itself or its class.

   port()
	       my ($side, $number) = $edge->port('start');
	       my ($side, $number) = $edge->port('end');

       Return the side and port number where this edge starts or ends.

       Returns undef for $side if the edge has no port restriction. The
       returned side will be one absolute direction of "east", "west", "north"
       or "south", depending on the port restriction and flow at that edge.

   get_attributes()
	       my $att = $object->get_attributes();

       Return all effective attributes on this object (graph/node/group/edge)
       as an anonymous hash ref. This respects inheritance and default values.

       See also raw_attributes().

   raw_attributes()
	       my $att = $object->get_attributes();

       Return all set attributes on this object (graph/node/group/edge) as an
       anonymous hash ref. This respects inheritance, but does not include
       default values for unset attributes.

       See also get_attributes().

   attribute related methods
       You can call all the various attribute related methods like
       "set_attribute()", "get_attribute()", etc. on an edge, too. For
       example:

	       $edge->set_attribute('label', 'by train');
	       my $attr = $edge->get_attributes();
	       my $raw_attr = $edge->raw_attributes();

       You can find more documentation in Graph::Easy.

EXPORT
       None by default.

SEE ALSO
       Graph::Easy.

AUTHOR
       Copyright (C) 2004 - 2008 by Tels <http://bloodgate.com>.

       See the LICENSE file for more details.

perl v5.14.1			  2010-11-05		  Graph::Easy::Edge(3)
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