So, I tried with 10 iterations, and it gets stuck anyway. I counted the elements, and there are ~500 nodes and ~500 edges in my graph... Again, I do not need nothing fancy, with having just all elements NOT clustered together in the middle (like with no layout), I'm ok.. (well, tree layout does not work for me due to the fact that it lays out a row of 500 elements to the side- not bringing visibillity). Thanks again!

El mié., 29 de jul. de 2015 a la(s) 4:16 p. m., Demian Schkolnik <demianschkolnik@gmail.com> escribió:
Hello! i will try fewer iterations. I think I may have between 200 and 500 elements total.. I will try it out inmediately and let you know.

El mié., 29 de jul. de 2015 a la(s) 4:13 p. m., Alexandre Bergel <alexandre.bergel@me.com> escribió:
This is a hard problem that many in the graph theory have spent a lot of time on.
Reduce the amount of iterations maybe. This layout is useful when you do not have any apparent structure in your data. What is the structure of your data?

Alexandre
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Alexandre Bergel  http://www.bergel.eu
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On Jul 29, 2015, at 3:53 PM, Demian Schkolnik <demianschkolnik@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi all! 
I want to make a visualization of a graph (nodes and edges), but applying ForceLayout to it takes forever, because the graph has too many elements. if I apply TreeLayout, for example, the view renders almost instantly. Is there some other Layout, similar to ForceLayout, but faster, for so many elements?
Thanks!
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