I also would find it useful to have raw values of those dynamic calculations, from which to make charts for presentation, with multiple graphs overlaid on the same axes, and formatted for talks and publications. I can count up nodes and edges easily enough with AppleScripts, thanks to the legibility of gefx files, and post-process in R or Excel, but it would seem better for both users and Gephi's future to have the benefit of Gephi's own dynamic computations output as tables.
Dynamic views would also be good for the centrality measures of a selected node, or several selected nodes.
In theory, I guess that all this is easy... but who can do it — what should a novice learn, in order to be able to contribute?Statistics:Posted by gruebleen — 13 May 2014 12:28
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