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This was his motivation to develop a tool that helps in understanding the consequences of source code modifications. [2] The project started as a commercial project in 2016 under the name Coati. [3] In November 2019, Sourcetrail was released as open-source software under version three of the GNU General Public License. [4]
PlantUML is an open-source tool allowing users to create diagrams from a plain text language. Besides various UML diagrams, PlantUML has support for various other software development related formats (such as Archimate, Block diagram, BPMN, C4, Computer network diagram, ERD, Gantt chart, Mind map, and WBD), as well as visualisation of JSON and YAML files.
Drishti (from Sanskrit दृष्टि dr̥ṣţi, meaning "vision" or "insight") is a multi-platform, open-source volume-exploration and presentation tool. [1] Written for visualizing tomography data, electron-microscopy data and the like, it aims to ease understanding of data sets and to assist with conveying that understanding to the research community or to lay persons.
Gephi has been used in a number of research projects in academia, journalism and elsewhere, for instance in visualizing the global connectivity of New York Times content [17] and examining Twitter network traffic during social unrest [18] [19] along with more traditional network analysis topics. [20]
Orange is an open-source software package released under GPL and hosted on GitHub.Versions up to 3.0 include core components in C++ with wrappers in Python.From version 3.0 onwards, Orange uses common Python open-source libraries for scientific computing, such as numpy, scipy and scikit-learn, while its graphical user interface operates within the cross-platform Qt framework.
Free and open-source software portal; Vega and Vega-Lite are visualization tools implementing a grammar of graphics, similar to ggplot2.The Vega and Vega-Lite grammars extend Leland Wilkinson's Grammar of Graphics [2] by adding a novel grammar of interactivity to assist in the exploration of complex datasets.
In 2009, based on the experience of developing and utilizing Prefuse and Flare, Jeffrey Heer, Mike Bostock, and Vadim Ogievetsky of Stanford University's Stanford Visualization Group created Protovis, a JavaScript library to generate SVG graphics from data. The library was known to data visualization practitioners and academics. [6]
3D Slicer is a free open source software (BSD-style license) that is a flexible, modular platform for image analysis and visualization. 3D Slicer is extended to enable development of both interactive and batch processing tools for a variety of applications. [4]