Thank you! igraph seems to be more Linux/Debian friendly. There is a "GNU R network analysis and visualization" package: r-cran-igraph
So far I have found:
https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/igraph/ https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/igraph/igraph.pdf
and a bunch of videos/tutorials, which I will have a better opinion about after I watch them.
I will keep publicly posting my experiences to help those running against the same kinds of problems.
$ time apt-cache search gephi
real 0m0.267s user 0m0.255s sys 0m0.012s
$ time apt-cache search igraph karbon - vector graphics application for the Calligra Suite cl-graph - simple graph data structure and algorithms libdirgra-java - Java library providing a simple directed graph implementation libdirgra-java-doc - Documentation for dirgra fonts-bajaderka - Warsaw's sign painters styled font fonts-gfs-neohellenic - modern Greek font family with matching Latin fonts-gfs-solomos - ancient Greek oblique font fonts-isabella - Isabella free TrueType font fonts-sil-annapurna - smart font for languages using Devanagari script fonts-uralic - Truetype fonts for Cyrillic-based Uralic languages golang-github-guptarohit-asciigraph-dev - Make lightweight ASCII line graph in CLI apps with no other dependencies golang-github-jesseduffield-asciigraph-dev - Go package to make lightweight ASCII line graph without dependencies golang-github-steveyen-gtreap-dev - gtreap is an immutable treap implementation in the Go Language gpw - Trigraph Password Generator libigraph-dev - library for creating and manipulating graphs - development files libigraph-examples - library for creating and manipulating graphs - example files libigraph1 - library for creating and manipulating graphs libjgrapht0.6-java - mathematical graph theory library for Java libjgrapht0.8-java - mathematical graph theory library for Java libtext-password-pronounceable-perl - Perl module to generate pronounceable passwords liwc - Tools for manipulating C source code msort - utility for sorting records in complex ways libnauty2 - library for graph automorphisms -- library package libnauty2-dev - library for graph automorphisms -- development package nauty - library for graph automorphisms -- interface and tools nauty-doc - library for graph automorphisms -- user guide otp - Generator for One Time Pads or Passwords perl-tk - Perl module providing the Tk graphics library python3-igraph - High performance graph data structures and algorithms (Python 3) r-cran-graphlayouts - GNU R additional layout algorithms for network visualizations r-cran-gwidgets - gWidgets API for Toolkit-Independent, Interactive GUIs r-cran-igraph - GNU R network analysis and visualization r-cran-propclust - Propensity Clustering and Decomposition scalable-cyrfonts-tex - Scalable Cyrillic fonts for TeX texlive-pictures - TeX Live: Graphics, pictures, diagrams texlive-fonts-extra - TeX Live: Additional fonts texlive-latex-extra - TeX Live: LaTeX additional packages tran - transcribe between character scripts (alphabets) vis - Modern, legacy free, simple yet efficient vim-like editor
real 0m0.303s user 0m0.283s sys 0m0.020s $
On 6/9/23, David Chartash dchartas@ieee.org wrote:
Hi Albretch, I would start off with Gephi https://gephi.org/ or try the R/C/Python... package igraph https://igraph.org/. Cheers,
David
Please forgive any spelling errors, sent from a poorly implemented software keyer
On Fri, Jun 9, 2023, 02:40 Albretch Mueller via Corpora < corpora@list.elra.info> wrote:
I could imagine, as John Lennon used to sing, that "I am not the only one" in need of such an application.
At times you get ten of thousand lines which you would like to quickly “visually parse” to gain a general sense of what you've got. Ideally, you should be able to play with it to select the records you need.
Think for example, of the many links to texts you would get from archive.org (which also includes some metadata) or *.pub (each site using their own quirkiness)
Based on some sort of GUI, you would see weighted terms (coloured or not based on a user's preference) with all other terms preceding (as some sort of tree-like structure confluent on that term) and following it ( ... branching off of it).
Which kind of applications people use to do such thing?
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