Difference between revisions of "Dot"

From Linuxintro
imported>ThorstenStaerk
imported>ThorstenStaerk
Line 2: Line 2:
  
 
= Mindmap =
 
= Mindmap =
[[image:Mindmap.png|right|thumb|211px|A mindmap created by the program dot.]]
+
<pic src=http://www.linuxintro.org/images/Mindmap.png align=right width=30% />
 +
 
 
Here's how you create a mindmap with dot:
 
Here's how you create a mindmap with dot:
  

Revision as of 13:29, 24 April 2020

Dot is a program from the graphviz package to draw graphs from the command line. It can, among other usages, be used to create MindMaps.

Mindmap

Here's how you create a mindmap with dot:

source.txt <source>

digraph "Wikimap" {
  "OS" -> "OpenSource"
  "OpenSource" -> "Linux"
  "OpenSource" -> "BSD"
  "BSD" -> "NetBSD"
  "BSD" -> "FreeBSD"
}

</source> create the graphical map <source>

dot -Tps -o mindmap.ps source.txt

</source> view the graphical map <source>

konqueror mindmap.ps

</source>

remove arrows

A mindmap created by the program dot.

Here is how you draw a mindmap without arrows, you use "arrowhead=none":

source.txt <source>

digraph "Wikimap" {
  "cloud" -> "public" [arrowhead=none]
  "cloud" -> "private" [arrowhead=none]
  "cloud" -> "data" [arrowhead=none]
  "cloud" -> "virtual machines" [arrowhead=none]
  "data" -> "ownCloud" [arrowhead=none]
  "public" -> "ownCloud" [arrowhead=none]
}

<source> create the graphical map <source>

$ dot -Tps -o mindmap.ps source.txt

<source> view the graphical map <source>

$ konqueror mindmap.ps

<source>

Layout

You can use several layouts: dot, twopi, neato and circo. Here is the neato layout:

Layout-neato.png

Sourcecode for the above: <source> digraph "Wikimap" {

 layout=neato
 overlap=false
 "OS" -> "OpenSource"
 "OpenSource" -> "Linux"
 "OpenSource" -> "BSD"
 "BSD" -> "NetBSD"
 "BSD" -> "FreeBSD"

} <source>

See also