graphviz overlap edges and arrows
So I was using graphviz
and wrote the following piece:
digraph MyGraph {
rankdir=TB;
size="8,5";
node [shape = circle]; 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 r
1->4
1->4
1->5
1->5
2->6
2->6
2->7
2->7
3->8
3->8
3->9
3->9
4->1
4->1
4->5
4->5
5->1
5->1
5->4
5->4
6->2
6->2
6->7
6->7
7->2
7->2
7->6
7->6
8->3
8->3
8->9
8->9
9->3
9->3
9->8
9->8
r->1
r->1
r->1
r->2
r->2
r->2
r->3
r->3
}
Output:
I don't like it that the edges overlap (meet). Is there any way to solve it automatically? if no, how to do it manually?
I was trying to use overlap = false;
but it didn't change anything.
Also, tikzpicture
could do the trick but I'm not sure how to do it.
Furthermore, I tried to search some previous thread but they asked for different things.
graphs
New contributor
add a comment |
So I was using graphviz
and wrote the following piece:
digraph MyGraph {
rankdir=TB;
size="8,5";
node [shape = circle]; 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 r
1->4
1->4
1->5
1->5
2->6
2->6
2->7
2->7
3->8
3->8
3->9
3->9
4->1
4->1
4->5
4->5
5->1
5->1
5->4
5->4
6->2
6->2
6->7
6->7
7->2
7->2
7->6
7->6
8->3
8->3
8->9
8->9
9->3
9->3
9->8
9->8
r->1
r->1
r->1
r->2
r->2
r->2
r->3
r->3
}
Output:
I don't like it that the edges overlap (meet). Is there any way to solve it automatically? if no, how to do it manually?
I was trying to use overlap = false;
but it didn't change anything.
Also, tikzpicture
could do the trick but I'm not sure how to do it.
Furthermore, I tried to search some previous thread but they asked for different things.
graphs
New contributor
2
Graphviz is off-topic for this site, so I'm voting to close. You should ask on Stackoverflow instead, with the risk of getting it closed there as a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/3967600/…. From that question you could try the idea of origin and end ports, I got some improvements on your example with, e.g.,2->6:w 2->6 2:sw->7:nw 2:w->7:w
.
– Marijn
5 hours ago
1
You could turn your question into a TeX question by switching gears. E.g.documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone} usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing} usegdlibrary{layered} begin{document} begin{tikzpicture} graph [layered layout, sibling distance=2cm, level distance=2cm, nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm}] { r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm], 3 -> 8 -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]}; }; end{tikzpicture} end{document}
compiled withlualatex
produces some similar graph (but not the arrows, which could be added).
– marmot
4 hours ago
add a comment |
So I was using graphviz
and wrote the following piece:
digraph MyGraph {
rankdir=TB;
size="8,5";
node [shape = circle]; 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 r
1->4
1->4
1->5
1->5
2->6
2->6
2->7
2->7
3->8
3->8
3->9
3->9
4->1
4->1
4->5
4->5
5->1
5->1
5->4
5->4
6->2
6->2
6->7
6->7
7->2
7->2
7->6
7->6
8->3
8->3
8->9
8->9
9->3
9->3
9->8
9->8
r->1
r->1
r->1
r->2
r->2
r->2
r->3
r->3
}
Output:
I don't like it that the edges overlap (meet). Is there any way to solve it automatically? if no, how to do it manually?
I was trying to use overlap = false;
but it didn't change anything.
Also, tikzpicture
could do the trick but I'm not sure how to do it.
Furthermore, I tried to search some previous thread but they asked for different things.
graphs
New contributor
So I was using graphviz
and wrote the following piece:
digraph MyGraph {
rankdir=TB;
size="8,5";
node [shape = circle]; 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 r
1->4
1->4
1->5
1->5
2->6
2->6
2->7
2->7
3->8
3->8
3->9
3->9
4->1
4->1
4->5
4->5
5->1
5->1
5->4
5->4
6->2
6->2
6->7
6->7
7->2
7->2
7->6
7->6
8->3
8->3
8->9
8->9
9->3
9->3
9->8
9->8
r->1
r->1
r->1
r->2
r->2
r->2
r->3
r->3
}
Output:
I don't like it that the edges overlap (meet). Is there any way to solve it automatically? if no, how to do it manually?
I was trying to use overlap = false;
but it didn't change anything.
Also, tikzpicture
could do the trick but I'm not sure how to do it.
Furthermore, I tried to search some previous thread but they asked for different things.
graphs
graphs
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 5 hours ago
abuka123abuka123
161
161
New contributor
New contributor
2
Graphviz is off-topic for this site, so I'm voting to close. You should ask on Stackoverflow instead, with the risk of getting it closed there as a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/3967600/…. From that question you could try the idea of origin and end ports, I got some improvements on your example with, e.g.,2->6:w 2->6 2:sw->7:nw 2:w->7:w
.
– Marijn
5 hours ago
1
You could turn your question into a TeX question by switching gears. E.g.documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone} usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing} usegdlibrary{layered} begin{document} begin{tikzpicture} graph [layered layout, sibling distance=2cm, level distance=2cm, nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm}] { r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm], 3 -> 8 -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]}; }; end{tikzpicture} end{document}
compiled withlualatex
produces some similar graph (but not the arrows, which could be added).
– marmot
4 hours ago
add a comment |
2
Graphviz is off-topic for this site, so I'm voting to close. You should ask on Stackoverflow instead, with the risk of getting it closed there as a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/3967600/…. From that question you could try the idea of origin and end ports, I got some improvements on your example with, e.g.,2->6:w 2->6 2:sw->7:nw 2:w->7:w
.
– Marijn
5 hours ago
1
You could turn your question into a TeX question by switching gears. E.g.documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone} usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing} usegdlibrary{layered} begin{document} begin{tikzpicture} graph [layered layout, sibling distance=2cm, level distance=2cm, nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm}] { r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm], 3 -> 8 -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]}; }; end{tikzpicture} end{document}
compiled withlualatex
produces some similar graph (but not the arrows, which could be added).
– marmot
4 hours ago
2
2
Graphviz is off-topic for this site, so I'm voting to close. You should ask on Stackoverflow instead, with the risk of getting it closed there as a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/3967600/…. From that question you could try the idea of origin and end ports, I got some improvements on your example with, e.g.,
2->6:w 2->6 2:sw->7:nw 2:w->7:w
.– Marijn
5 hours ago
Graphviz is off-topic for this site, so I'm voting to close. You should ask on Stackoverflow instead, with the risk of getting it closed there as a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/3967600/…. From that question you could try the idea of origin and end ports, I got some improvements on your example with, e.g.,
2->6:w 2->6 2:sw->7:nw 2:w->7:w
.– Marijn
5 hours ago
1
1
You could turn your question into a TeX question by switching gears. E.g.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone} usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing} usegdlibrary{layered} begin{document} begin{tikzpicture} graph [layered layout, sibling distance=2cm, level distance=2cm, nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm}] { r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm], 3 -> 8 -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]}; }; end{tikzpicture} end{document}
compiled with lualatex
produces some similar graph (but not the arrows, which could be added).– marmot
4 hours ago
You could turn your question into a TeX question by switching gears. E.g.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone} usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing} usegdlibrary{layered} begin{document} begin{tikzpicture} graph [layered layout, sibling distance=2cm, level distance=2cm, nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm}] { r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm], 3 -> 8 -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]}; }; end{tikzpicture} end{document}
compiled with lualatex
produces some similar graph (but not the arrows, which could be added).– marmot
4 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
Welcome to TeX.SE! Here is a TikZ code that produces something of this sort. Unfortunately this is not too automatic. However, it may be the basis for some deeper application of the graph drawing algorithms.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing}
usegdlibrary{layered}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
graph [layered layout, sibling distance=3cm, level distance=2cm,
nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm},edges={opacity=0}] {
r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm],
3 -> 8 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]};
};
begin{scope}[every edge/.append style={-latex}]
foreach X in {1,2,3}
{draw (r) edge[bend right=15] (X) (r) edge (X)
(r) edge[bend right=-15] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/4,4/5,2/6,6/7,3/8,8/9}
{draw(X) edge[bend right=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend right=25] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=10] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=25] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/5,2/7,3/9}
{draw
(X) edge[bend left=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend left=20] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=30] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=40] (X);}
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
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Welcome to TeX.SE! Here is a TikZ code that produces something of this sort. Unfortunately this is not too automatic. However, it may be the basis for some deeper application of the graph drawing algorithms.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing}
usegdlibrary{layered}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
graph [layered layout, sibling distance=3cm, level distance=2cm,
nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm},edges={opacity=0}] {
r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm],
3 -> 8 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]};
};
begin{scope}[every edge/.append style={-latex}]
foreach X in {1,2,3}
{draw (r) edge[bend right=15] (X) (r) edge (X)
(r) edge[bend right=-15] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/4,4/5,2/6,6/7,3/8,8/9}
{draw(X) edge[bend right=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend right=25] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=10] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=25] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/5,2/7,3/9}
{draw
(X) edge[bend left=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend left=20] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=30] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=40] (X);}
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
Welcome to TeX.SE! Here is a TikZ code that produces something of this sort. Unfortunately this is not too automatic. However, it may be the basis for some deeper application of the graph drawing algorithms.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing}
usegdlibrary{layered}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
graph [layered layout, sibling distance=3cm, level distance=2cm,
nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm},edges={opacity=0}] {
r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm],
3 -> 8 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]};
};
begin{scope}[every edge/.append style={-latex}]
foreach X in {1,2,3}
{draw (r) edge[bend right=15] (X) (r) edge (X)
(r) edge[bend right=-15] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/4,4/5,2/6,6/7,3/8,8/9}
{draw(X) edge[bend right=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend right=25] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=10] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=25] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/5,2/7,3/9}
{draw
(X) edge[bend left=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend left=20] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=30] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=40] (X);}
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
Welcome to TeX.SE! Here is a TikZ code that produces something of this sort. Unfortunately this is not too automatic. However, it may be the basis for some deeper application of the graph drawing algorithms.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing}
usegdlibrary{layered}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
graph [layered layout, sibling distance=3cm, level distance=2cm,
nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm},edges={opacity=0}] {
r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm],
3 -> 8 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]};
};
begin{scope}[every edge/.append style={-latex}]
foreach X in {1,2,3}
{draw (r) edge[bend right=15] (X) (r) edge (X)
(r) edge[bend right=-15] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/4,4/5,2/6,6/7,3/8,8/9}
{draw(X) edge[bend right=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend right=25] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=10] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=25] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/5,2/7,3/9}
{draw
(X) edge[bend left=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend left=20] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=30] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=40] (X);}
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Welcome to TeX.SE! Here is a TikZ code that produces something of this sort. Unfortunately this is not too automatic. However, it may be the basis for some deeper application of the graph drawing algorithms.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing}
usegdlibrary{layered}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
graph [layered layout, sibling distance=3cm, level distance=2cm,
nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm},edges={opacity=0}] {
r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm],
3 -> 8 [xshift=-0.5cm] -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]};
};
begin{scope}[every edge/.append style={-latex}]
foreach X in {1,2,3}
{draw (r) edge[bend right=15] (X) (r) edge (X)
(r) edge[bend right=-15] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/4,4/5,2/6,6/7,3/8,8/9}
{draw(X) edge[bend right=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend right=25] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=10] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=25] (X);}
foreach X/Y in {1/5,2/7,3/9}
{draw
(X) edge[bend left=10] (Y)
(X) edge[bend left=20] (Y)
(Y) edge[bend right=30] (X)
(Y) edge[bend right=40] (X);}
end{scope}
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
answered 2 hours ago
marmotmarmot
95.5k4110210
95.5k4110210
add a comment |
add a comment |
abuka123 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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2
Graphviz is off-topic for this site, so I'm voting to close. You should ask on Stackoverflow instead, with the risk of getting it closed there as a duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/3967600/…. From that question you could try the idea of origin and end ports, I got some improvements on your example with, e.g.,
2->6:w 2->6 2:sw->7:nw 2:w->7:w
.– Marijn
5 hours ago
1
You could turn your question into a TeX question by switching gears. E.g.
documentclass[tikz,border=3.14mm]{standalone} usetikzlibrary{graphs,graphdrawing} usegdlibrary{layered} begin{document} begin{tikzpicture} graph [layered layout, sibling distance=2cm, level distance=2cm, nodes={draw,circle,minimum size=1cm}] { r -> {1 -> 4 [xshift=-1cm] -> 5, 2 -> 6 -> 7 [xshift=0.5cm], 3 -> 8 -> 9 [xshift=0.5cm]}; }; end{tikzpicture} end{document}
compiled withlualatex
produces some similar graph (but not the arrows, which could be added).– marmot
4 hours ago