问题
The prefuse visualization toolkit is pretty nice, but for Java. I was wondering if there was something similar for python. My primary interest is being able to navigate dynamic graphs.
回答1:
I know this is not exactly python, but you could use prefuse in python through jython
Something along the lines of:
Add prefuse to your path:
export JYTHONPATH=$JYTHONPATH:prefuse.jar
and
>>> import prefuse
from your jython machinery
this guy has an example of using prefuse from jython here
回答2:
You might want to check out SUMMON, a visualization system that uses python but handles fairly large data sets. There's an impressive video of visualizing and navigating a massive tree. (Can't post the link because I'm a first time poster. It's on the SUMMON front page.)
回答3:
If you're using a Mac, check out NodeBox. One extension it offers is a graph library that looks pretty good. Poke around in the NodeBox gallery some to find something similar to your problem and it should have some helpful links.
回答4:
This is well after OP, but just in case:
pydot. Allows generation & rendering of graphs. If you need graph algorithms (transitive closure etc.) also look at pygraphlib which extends and integrates pydot.
Note that neither allows interactive editing of the rendered diagram. They both use graphviz to generate output.
回答5:
You could try using prefuse with JPype, if you can't find a suitable replacement.
回答6:
Note that prefuse now has the flare package which uses flash.
Connect that to a Python backend via web2py and you've got a great web app (just an idea).
回答7:
MayaVi
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/591839/is-there-a-python-equivalent-of-the-prefuse-visualization-toolkit