ImPrEd: An Improved Force-Directed Algorithm that Prevents Nodes from Crossing Edges - Inria - Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies du numérique Access content directly
Journal Articles Computer Graphics Forum Year : 2011

ImPrEd: An Improved Force-Directed Algorithm that Prevents Nodes from Crossing Edges

Abstract

PrEd is a force-directed algorithm that improves the existing layout of a graph while preserving its edge crossing properties. The algorithm has a number of applications including: improving the layouts of planar graph drawing algorithms, interacting with a graph layout, and drawing Euler-like diagrams. The algorithm ensures that nodes do not cross edges during its execution. However, PrEd can be computationally expensive and overly-restrictive in terms of node movement. In this paper, we introduce ImPrEd: an improved version of PrEd that overcomes some of its limitations and widens its range of applicability. ImPrEd also adds features such as flexible or crossable edges, allowing for greater control over the output. Flexible edges, in particular, can improve the distribution of graph elements and the angular resolution of the input graph. They can also be used to generate Euler diagrams with smooth boundaries. As flexible edges increase data set size, we experience an execution/drawing quality trade off. However, when flexible edges are not used, ImPrEd proves to be consistently faster than PrEd.

Domains

Other [cs.OH]
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
EuroVis11.pdf (2.04 Mo) Télécharger le fichier
Origin : Files produced by the author(s)
Loading...

Dates and versions

inria-00605921 , version 1 (08-08-2011)

Identifiers

  • HAL Id : inria-00605921 , version 1

Cite

Paolo Simonetto, Daniel Archambault, David Auber, Romain Bourqui. ImPrEd: An Improved Force-Directed Algorithm that Prevents Nodes from Crossing Edges. Computer Graphics Forum, 2011, IEEE Symposium on visualization 2011 (EuroVis 2011), 30 (3). ⟨inria-00605921⟩
355 View
680 Download

Share

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More