SkBlaz/py3plex

Issue with importing multinet from py3plex.core

Opened this issue · 1 comments

When importing the multinet module from py3plex.core as in the example, an error with numpy's int attribute occurs:
AttributeError Traceback (most recent call last)
Cell In[2], line 1
----> 1 from py3plex.core import multinet
2 from py3plex.core import random_generators
3 # import numpy as np
4 # import queue
5 # import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
(...)
8 # ## some random graph
9 # ER_multilayer = random_generators.random_multilayer_ER(3000,10,0.05,directed=False)

File ~\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python39\lib\site-packages\py3plex\core\multinet.py:3
1 # This is the main data structure container
----> 3 import networkx as nx
4 import itertools
5 from . import parsers

File ~\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python39\lib\site-packages\networkx_init_.py:115
112 import networkx.generators
113 from networkx.generators import *
--> 115 import networkx.readwrite
116 from networkx.readwrite import *
118 # Need to test with SciPy, when available

File ~\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python39\lib\site-packages\networkx\readwrite_init_.py:15
13 from networkx.readwrite.nx_yaml import *
14 from networkx.readwrite.gml import *
---> 15 from networkx.readwrite.graphml import *
16 from networkx.readwrite.gexf import *
17 from networkx.readwrite.nx_shp import *

File ~\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python39\lib\site-packages\networkx\readwrite\graphml.py:314
310 raise nx.NetworkXError('file not successfully read as graphml')
311 return glist[0]
--> 314 class GraphML(object):
315 NS_GRAPHML = "http://graphml.graphdrawing.org/xmlns"
316 NS_XSI = "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"

File ~\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python39\lib\site-packages\networkx\readwrite\graphml.py:346, in GraphML()
341 pass
342 else:
343 # prepend so that python types are created upon read (last entry wins)
344 types = [(np.float64, "float"), (np.float32, "float"),
345 (np.float16, "float"), (np.float_, "float"),
--> 346 (np.int, "int"), (np.int8, "int"),
347 (np.int16, "int"), (np.int32, "int"),
348 (np.int64, "int"), (np.uint8, "int"),
349 (np.uint16, "int"), (np.uint32, "int"),
350 (np.uint64, "int"), (np.int_, "int"),
351 (np.intc, "int"), (np.intp, "int"),
352 ] + types
354 xml_type = dict(types)
355 python_type = dict(reversed(a) for a in types)

File ~\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python39\lib\site-packages\numpy_init_.py:313, in getattr(attr)
308 warnings.warn(
309 f"In the future np.{attr} will be defined as the "
310 "corresponding NumPy scalar.", FutureWarning, stacklevel=2)
312 if attr in former_attrs:
--> 313 raise AttributeError(former_attrs[attr])
315 if attr == 'testing':
316 import numpy.testing as testing

AttributeError: module 'numpy' has no attribute 'int'.
np.int was a deprecated alias for the builtin int. To avoid this error in existing code, use int by itself. Doing this will not modify any behavior and is safe. When replacing np.int, you may wish to use e.g. np.int64 or np.int32 to specify the precision. If you wish to review your current use, check the release note link for additional information.
The aliases was originally deprecated in NumPy 1.20; for more details and guidance see the original release note at:
https://numpy.org/devdocs/release/1.20.0-notes.html#deprecations