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OpenSceneGraph is an open-source 3D graphics application programming interface (library or framework), [2] used by application developers in fields such as visual simulation, computer games, virtual reality, scientific visualization and modeling.
Scribus is an open-source DTP program that can use Graphviz to render graphs by using its internal editor in a special frame type called render frame. [11] Sphinx is a documentation generator that can use Graphviz to embed graphs in documents. TOra a free-software database development and administration GUI, available under the GNU GPL.
graph-tool is a Python module for manipulation and statistical analysis of graphs (AKA networks). The core data structures and algorithms of graph-tool are implemented in C++ , making extensive use of metaprogramming , based heavily on the Boost Graph Library . [ 1 ]
NetworkX, an open source Python library for studying complex graphs. Tulip (software) is a free software in the domain of information visualisation capable of manipulating huge graphs (with more than 1.000.000 elements). yEd, a free Java-based graph editor, supports import from and export to GML.
Microsoft Automatic Graph Layout, open-source .NET library (formerly called GLEE) for laying out graphs [30] NetworkX is a Python library for studying graphs and networks. Tulip, [31] an open-source data visualization tool; yEd, a graph editor with graph layout functionality [32] PGF/TikZ 3.0 with the graphdrawing package (requires LuaTeX). [33]
Architecture of OpenSceneGraph, an open-source 3D graphics API supporting feature-rich and widely adopted scene graph implementation.. A scene graph is a general data structure commonly used by vector-based graphics editing applications and modern computer games, which arranges the logical and often spatial representation of a graphical scene.
Inspired by Guido van Rossum's 1998 essay on Python graph representation, [5] NetworkX made its public debut at the 2004 SciPy annual conference. In April of 2005, NetworkX was made available as open source software. [1] Several Python packages focusing on graph theory, including igraph, graph-tool, and numerous others
Xfig is an open source vector graphics editor that runs under X on most Unix platforms. In xfig, figures may be drawn using objects such as circles, boxes, lines, spline curves, text, etc. It is possible to import images in many formats, such as GIF, JPEG, SVG, and EPSF.