graph rendering in python (flowchart visualization) [closed] graph rendering in python (flowchart visualization) [closed] python python

graph rendering in python (flowchart visualization) [closed]


Graphviz is the best option in my opinion.

Graphviz is the premiere graph rendering/layout library; it's mature, stable, open-source, and free of charge. It is not a dedicated flowchart or diagramming package, but its core use case--i.e., efficient and aesthetic rendering of objects comprised of nodes and edges, obviously subsumes flowchart drawing--particularly because its api allows the user to set various constraints on the layout to encourage rendering in the various formats--eg, you can require all nodes of the same level (same number of parents from the root) to be rendered in a single center-aligned row.

Graphviz is not a python library (it's written in C); however there are high quality python bindings available.

The python-Graphviz library I am most familar with is pygraphviz, which is excellent.

The other two are pydot and yapgvb. I have used both of these at least a few times. Each is smaller than pygraphviz (which might be an advantage depending on your use case); in addition neither is documented as well as pygraphviz.

Fortunately, all three of these python libraries are thin wrappers over Graphviz, so none conceal the lightweight, elegant Graphviz syntax (the dot language).

alt text

Here's the code (in graphviz' dot language) I used to create the small "flowchart" below:

digraph {  node [    fill=cornflowerblue,            fontcolor=white,            shape=diamond,            style=filled];  Step1 [   color=darkgoldenrod2,            fontcolor=navy,            label=start,            shape=box];  Step2;  Step3a [  style=filled,            fillcolor=grey80,            color=grey80,            shape=circle,            fontcolor=navy];  Step1  -> Step2;  Step1  -> Step2a;  Step2a -> Step3a;  Step3;  Step3a -> Step3;  Step3a -> Step2b;  Step2  -> Step2b;  Step2b -> Step3;  End [ shape=rectangle,        color=darkgoldenrod2,        fontcolor=navy];  Step3  -> End [label=193];}


Like doug, I would suggest Graphviz.

I would also like to mention that you can also directly write graphs in the very simple dot language (they can then be plotted with Graphviz or other tools); this is a more lightweight alternative to using pydot, with no dependency of your code on any module.


gprof2dot.py can automatically profile and visualize the execution flow in your program. It can be found as reciple 578138 on ActiveState Code. Please note the batch file at the end of the program.