Installation
============
In short: ``pip install louvain``.
Alternatively, use `Anaconda `_ and get
the conda packages from the `conda-forge channel
`_, which supports both Unix, Mac OS and
Windows.
For Unix like systems it is possible to install from source. For Windows this is
overly complicated, and you are recommended to use the binary wheels. There are
two things that are needed by this package: the igraph ``C`` core library and
the python-igraph python package. For both, please see http://igraph.org.
Make sure you have all necessary tools for compilation. In Ubuntu this can be
installed using ``sudo apt-get install build-essential``, please refer to the
documentation for your specific system. Make sure that not only ``gcc`` is
installed, but also ``g++``, as the ``louvain-igraph`` package is programmed in
``C++``.
You can check if all went well by running a variety of tests using ``python
setup.py test``.
There are basically two installation modes, similar to the python-igraph
package itself (from which most of the setup.py comes).
1. No ``C`` core library is installed yet. The packages will be compiled and
linked statically to an automatically downloaded version of the ``C`` core
library of igraph.
2. A ``C`` core library is already installed. In this case, the package will
link dynamically to the already installed version. This is probably also the
version that is used by the igraph package, but you may want to double check
this.
In case the python-igraph package is already installed before, make sure that
both use the **same versions**.
The cleanest setup it to install and compile the ``C`` core library yourself
(make sure that the header files are also included, e.g. install also the
development package from igraph). Then both the python-igraph package, as well
as this package are compiled and (dynamically) linked to the same ``C`` core
library.