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Date:      Mon, 15 Sep 2008 20:33:17 +0200
From:      Peter Boosten <peter@boosten.org>
To:        John Almberg <jalmberg@identry.com>
Cc:        "freebsd-questions@freebsd.org" <freebsd-questions@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Port for drawing directed graphs?
Message-ID:  <28FA433D-5E3E-495E-84AE-463503513A12@boosten.org>
In-Reply-To: <224BE6F8-586E-45F6-AD8D-BE32630525D4@identry.com>
References:  <D99E9FAD-34F9-4040-A261-F8F950DF0EE5@identry.com> <89ce7f740809150801o37176df9oa7be4cc8f4d50a95@mail.gmail.com> <0A89B579-2549-4A12-9514-1597B61BCC07@identry.com> <FFDD66D7-1BFF-4939-BA00-43AFEA75EDB3@boosten.org> <224BE6F8-586E-45F6-AD8D-BE32630525D4@identry.com>

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On 15 sep 2008, at 19:49, John Almberg <jalmberg@identry.com> wrote:

>> Gnuplot?
>
> Might be able to do it in gnuplot or Latex, but graphviz seems to be  
> a single purpose tool aimed at visualizing directed graphs. Plus it  
> just works... I got a test graph generated in less than 15 minutes  
> after typing "make install". Pretty awesome...
>
> One thing I'm still digging for is how it will handle large data  
> sets... I'm not even sure this is practical, but the graphs I'm  
> dealing with would typically have hundreds of nodes.

I create graphs with appr 9000 nodes of data with gnuplot, I will try  
graphviz though.

Peter



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