Looking real good. I like the red edges prior to deletion when you drag outside the canvas.
I've now run this on two machines - one is 32-bit, one 64-bit. Otherwise pretty much the same - recent Firefox on KUbuntu, approx 3GHz chips. The editor is very crisp and robust on the 32-bit machine. On 64-bit it used to be somewhat painful to use and drag-and- trash wouldn't even work, while this version seems a bit faster, but still is much, much slower than the excellent performance on 32-bit. Any thoughts? Is this JSProcessing, or maybe just Javascript? Let me know if there is more specific info I can provide. Rob On May 7, 6:08 pm, Rado <rki...@gmail.com> wrote: > New version is up: > > http://www.math.uiuc.edu/~rkirov2/processing/grapheditor.html > > The short changelog: > 1) By popular demand, when you drag a vertex out of the page the edges > turn red to indicate you are going to lose it and it is not erased > until you release the button. > 2) There is an accompanying python script which preps ups the graph > data in JS format for easy copy/paste to get the same graph in the > editor. > 3) The edges of the selected vertex are now blue. This is just a > visual clue. > > Rado > > On May 5, 2:52 pm, rjf <fate...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > On May 5, 10:53 am, Andras Salamon <andras.sala...@comlab.ox.ac.uk> > > wrote: > > ..... > > > > I thought papers like your > > > http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/~fateman/papers/graphing7.pdf > > > were highly appropriate for the Graph Drawing symposium? > > > http://facweb.cs.depaul.edu/gd2009/gd2009.asp > > > (Submission deadline is 31 May 2009.) > > > > Or is that one of the "upgraded" venues? > > > Thanks for the suggestion. > > > These people are doing very sophisticated things in laying out graphs, > > and have a substantial history of algorithm development, competition > > in a set of benchmarks, etc. My contribution would be to say "I wrote > > this relatively naive program, using a graphics toolkit, in the > > programming language Lisp, so it can be called from a computer algebra > > system". > > > Since it's not advancing the art of graph display, I would not expect > > it to be of interest. > > > Something notable about it is that it's under 300 lines of code. > > > Probably not a winner for this conference :) > > RJF --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ To post to this group, send email to sage-devel@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to sage-devel-unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/sage-devel URLs: http://www.sagemath.org -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---