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Home/ Questions/Q 9194417
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T21:24:29+00:00 2026-06-17T21:24:29+00:00

I’m going through the igraph examples in python, and keep encountering this problem. The

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I’m going through the igraph examples in python, and keep encountering this problem.

Kautz, zealously cropped

The outermost vertices are partially outside of the bounding box. The example doesn’t have this problem nearly as badly.

(Also, in mine, it seems to be drawing additional lines for two-way connections, whereas in the example, it’s just putting an arrow on each side. If this is an easy fix, please let me know.)

My code, copied from the example page, is below.

g = Graph.Kautz(m=3, n=2)
adj = g.get_adjacency()
fig.add(g, layout="fr", vertex_label=None)
fig.add(adj, bbox=(360, 0, 480, 120), grid_width=0, opacity=0.7)
fig.show()

My installation details are here.

No configuration file, using defaults
igraph 0.6 running inside Python 2.7.3 (default, Aug  1 2012, 05:16:07) 
[GCC 4.6.3] on linux2

I’d be very grateful for any help!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T21:24:31+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 9:24 pm

    Curved edges were introduced into the graph drawer of igraph later than the time when that figure was made in the documentation, so that’s why you haven’t seen the curved edges in the figure of the documentation. Anyway, curved edges can easily be disabled:

    graph.es["curved"] = False
    

    or

    plot(graph, edge_curved=False)
    

    As for the edges that do not fit in the bounding box: the plot() function (which is the one-shot function for quick plots) has a margin keyword argument that puts a white margin around the graph plot; this is essentially done by contracting the bounding box of the figure by a given number of pixels to ensure that the edges stay inside (most of the time). When you construct your own plot by working directly with the plot class, you have to add a margin yourself:

    bbox = BoundingBox(600, 600)
    figure = Plot(bbox=bbox)
    bbox = bbox.contract(20)
    figure.add(graph, bbox=bbox, layout=layout)
    figure.show()
    

    Another difference between the built-in plot function and the Plot class is that the plot function adds a white background by default, while Plot uses a transparent background. You can override that by using the background keyword argument of the Plot constructor.

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