The degree of a vertex is the number of edges that either go into or out of a vertex, where loops are counted twice. This number tells us how many ways we can move from that vertex to another (or even the same) vertex within the network.
A useful trick is to make a ring close around the vertex - count up the number of times that edges cross the ring at a vertex, and you’ll have the degree:
It is sometimes useful to use a table (its proper name is the adjacency matrix) to represent a network. This is a square array of numbers, one row and column for each vertex, that records how many connections there are between the vertices. For an undirected network, the entry for a particular row and column represents the number of edges connecting the matching vertices.
Here’s a simple network with $5$5 vertices:
Now we can create a table, with one row and column for each vertex:
Then we put the number edges connecting two vertices as the corresponding table entry. Let’s start by filling out the first row by putting a $1$1 if it is connected to $A$A, and a $0$0 if it isn’t.
$0$0 comes first, because $A$A isn’t connected to itself (there’s no loop at $A$A), and $A$A is connected to $B$B, $C$C, $D$D, and $E$E, so we put a $1$1 for each other entry in the table.
Since these edges are undirected, we can fill out the first column with the same numbers - if $A$A is connected to $B$B, then $B$B is connected to $A$A, and so on:
Now to fill out the second row, we notice that $B$B is connected to $A$A (already recorded), not itself (no loop), and it is connected to $C$C, $D$D, and $E$E:
We then record the remaining connections between $C$C, $D$D, and $E$E in the same way:
This is our completed table! Notice that:
All adjacency matrices representing simple networks will have these features.
As an added bonus the sum of all the entries in a row (or column) gives us the degree of the corresponding vertex - we can tell from the table that $C$C and $E$E have degree $2$2, $D$D has degree $3$3, and $A$A and $B$B have degree $4$4. This trick doesn't work if the network has loops, though - in this case, numbers on the main diagonal need to be doubled, to make sure they're counted twice.
Now for a directed network, the entry in a particular row and column indicates the number of edges going from the corresponding row vertex to the corresponding column vertex. Here’s a directed, non-simple network with $5$5 vertices and its corresponding table:
This table looks a little different from the last one! Notice that:
While an asymmetrical table means the network is directed, there are directed networks that produce symmetrical tables.
Up until now we have been using networks to make adjacency matrices. But we can go back the other way - the information in these tables, and knowing whether the network is directed or undirected, is enough for us to create the network!
Here’s a table with $6$6 rows and columns (so there are $6$6 vertices in the network), and we are also told that the network is undirected.
This is a representation of the network that we get when we draw it out:
We start with the first row, and the vertex on the left. We draw in the edges connected to that vertex. Then we move on to the next row and move to the next vertex clockwise, ignoring the numbers below the main diagonal - they get drawn into the network when we do earlier rows for undirected networks. If the graph is directed, all the numbers need to be turned into edges.