To clarify, graphs are those used in mathematics, they have vertices and edges. First of all, the component for visualizing graphs is of interest, and not the component for describing them. It is necessary to work in the usual winforms-application.
3 answers
- GLEE + QuickGraph
- Graph # (based on WPF)
If necessary, WPF-control can be hosted inside WinForms
- I'll try to deal with GLEE, thanks. With Graph # I did not understand how to place it on the form, as I understood it, I need the 4th framework. - LinuxFan
- one... and it is better not to force the corpse of WinForms and write immediately on a clean and bright WPF. - VladD
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There are a lot of resources. Here is a similar question from Stackoverflow.
- Well, as if I saw the question on stackoverflow, but it did not become easier to answer. <br>
Graph#does not seem to be made to work due to the lack of WPF,QuickGraphis generally just a mat. description of graphs, tryNodeXL. - LinuxFan
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There is also GraphX but also on WPF. WinForms WPF. WinForms for working with graphics and display is a real nightmare. Although you can pokhormarit even more and use Interop to embed WPF in WinForms :)
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