\name{floyd.warshall.all.pairs.sp} \alias{floyd.warshall.all.pairs.sp} \title{compute shortest paths for all pairs of nodes} \description{ compute shortest paths for all pairs of nodes } \usage{ floyd.warshall.all.pairs.sp(g) } \arguments{ \item{g}{ graph object with edge weights given} } \details{ Compute shortest paths between every pair of vertices for a dense graph. It works on both undirected and directed graph. The result is given as a distance matrix. The matrix is symmetric for an undirected graph, and asymmetric (very likely) for a directed graph. For a sparse graph, the \code{johnson.all.pairs.sp} functions should be used instead. See documentation on these algorithms in Boost Graph Library for more details. } \value{ A matrix of shortest path lengths between all pairs of nodes in the graph. } \references{ Boost Graph Library ( www.boost.org/libs/graph/doc/index.html ) The Boost Graph Library: User Guide and Reference Manual; by Jeremy G. Siek, Lie-Quan Lee, and Andrew Lumsdaine; (Addison-Wesley, Pearson Education Inc., 2002), xxiv+321pp. ISBN 0-201-72914-8 } \author{Li Long } \seealso{\code{\link{johnson.all.pairs.sp}}} \examples{ con <- file(system.file("XML/conn.gxl", package="RBGL"), open="r") coex <- fromGXL(con) close(con) floyd.warshall.all.pairs.sp(coex) } \keyword{ models }