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Home/ Questions/Q 559397
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T12:14:01+00:00 2026-05-13T12:14:01+00:00

I’ve got a list of objects (probably not more than 100), where each object

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I’ve got a list of objects (probably not more than 100), where each object has a distance to all the other objects. This distance is merely the added absolute difference between all the fields these objects share. There might be few (one) or many (dozens) of fields, thus the dimensionality of the distance is not important.

I’d like to display these points in a 2D graph such that objects which have a small distance appear close together. I’m hoping this will convey clearly how many sub-groups there are in the entire list. Obviously the axes of this graph are meaningless (I’m not even sure "graph" is the correct word to use).

What would be a good algorithm to convert a network of distances into a 2D point distribution? Ideally, I’d like a small change to the distance network to result in a small change in the graphic, so that incremental progress can be viewed as a smooth change over time.

I’ve made a small example of the sort of result I’m looking for:
Example Graphic http://en.wiki.mcneel.com/content/upload/images/GraphExample.png

Any ideas greatly appreciated,
David


Edit:

It actually seems to have worked. I treat the entire set of values as a 2D particle cloud, construct inverse square repulsion forces between all particles and linear attraction forces based on inverse distance. It’s not a stable algorithm, the result tends to spin violently whenever an additional iteration is performed, but it does always seem to generate a good separation into visual clusters:

alt text http://en.wiki.mcneel.com/content/upload/images/ParticleCloudSolution.png

I can post the C# code if anyone is interested (there’s quite a lot of it sadly)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T12:14:02+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 12:14 pm

    Graphviz contains implementations of several different approaches to solving this problem; consider using its spring model graph layout tools as a basis for your solution. Alternatively, its site contains a good collection of source material on the related theory.

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