in NetworkX cannot save a graph as jpg or png file

I struggled with the same problem. Looking at other comments and with the help of this link https://problemsolvingwithpython.com/06-Plotting-with-Matplotlib/06.04-Saving-Plots/ it worked for me! Two things that i had to change in my simple program was to add: %matplotlib inline after importing matplotlib and save the figure before plt.show(). See my basic example:

    #importing the package
    import networkx as nx
    import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    %matplotlib inline

    #initializing an empty graph
    G = nx.Graph()
    #adding one node
    G.add_node(1)
    #adding a second node
    G.add_node(2)
    #adding an edge between the two nodes (undirected)
    G.add_edge(1,2)

    nx.draw(G, with_labels=True)
    plt.savefig('plotgraph.png', dpi=300, bbox_inches='tight')
    plt.show()

#dpi= specifies how many dots per inch (image resolution) are in the saved image, #bbox_inches='tight' is optional #use plt.show() after saving. Hope this helps.


It's related to plt.show method.

Help of show method:

def show(*args, **kw):
    """
    Display a figure.

    When running in ipython with its pylab mode, display all
    figures and return to the ipython prompt.

    In non-interactive mode, display all figures and block until
    the figures have been closed; in interactive mode it has no
    effect unless figures were created prior to a change from
    non-interactive to interactive mode (not recommended).  In
    that case it displays the figures but does not block.

    A single experimental keyword argument, *block*, may be
    set to True or False to override the blocking behavior
    described above.
    """

When you call plt.show() in your script, it seems something like file object is still open, and plt.savefig method for writing can not read from that stream completely. but there is a block option for plt.show that can change this behavior, so you can use it:

plt.show(block=False)
plt.savefig("Graph.png", format="PNG")

Or just comment it:

# plt.show()
plt.savefig("Graph.png", format="PNG")

Or just save befor show it:

plt.savefig("Graph.png", format="PNG")
plt.show()

Demo: Here