Dirk Van Hertem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > * nodes on specific coordinates > * make connections between them according to the connections in my network > * put a number and arrow next to the connections indicating the power flow > * put a number next to every node (for voltages) > * preferably a vector format output for
I don't know what control it gives you to specify explicit coordinates but GraphViz (available as a Debian package) is a venerable and useful graph visualizer which will satisfy your other requirements. You may have to put in some effort to massage your data into a proper input format. Luck, -Brett. apt-cache search graphviz libgraphviz-perl - Perl interface to the GraphViz graphing tool deps-tools-cli - DEPS command-line tools libdeps-renderer-dot-perl - DEPS renderer plugin using GraphViz/dot monotone-viz - visualize a monotone repository python-pydot - Python interface to Graphviz's dot sig2dot - converts a list of GPG signatures to a .dot file springgraph - creates a graph from a .dot file (neato alternative) visitors - A fast web server log analyzer dot2tex - Graphviz to LaTeX converter graphviz - rich set of graph drawing tools graphviz-dev - graphviz libs and headers against which to build applications graphviz-doc - additional documentation for graphviz libsql-translator-perl - SQL translation library ncc - C source code analyzer python-pygraphviz - Python interface to the Graphviz graph layout and visualization package sqlfairy - SQL translation utilities -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

