Wow, such a great video super clear and interesting. (and having your face next to your screen is really nice and makes this easier to watch than most tutorial videos). Thank you!
Hi! Great video! Do you know how to visualize the bipartite graph with group nodes on the left and actor nodes on the right? I am going crazy trying to understand how to do that😅😅
Hi! Very useful video! Is it possible to segment the network if you have for instance date and time? Are there any good sources you can recommend how to do that? Thank you!
The trick about clicking the number in the filter range setting is probably the weirdest UI decision 😆 But I'll use it everyday now! ("came for bipartite networks, stayed for small Gephi tricks")
The network itself can be found in the description in the link below "GEXF File". As for how to obtain that GEXF, the explanations are in the tutorial mentioned in the description, and more precisely right there: jacomyma.github.io/mapping-controversies/1.9/#data (it involves a CSV file and a Jupyter notebook, available on Google Colab)
Wow, such a great video super clear and interesting. (and having your face next to your screen is really nice and makes this easier to watch than most tutorial videos). Thank you!
The video is very well made and very informative but I'd expected you would show how to represent a bipartite network. Thanks
Hi! Great video! Do you know how to visualize the bipartite graph with group nodes on the left and actor nodes on the right? I am going crazy trying to understand how to do that😅😅
Hi! Very useful video! Is it possible to segment the network if you have for instance date and time? Are there any good sources you can recommend how to do that? Thank you!
Really clear and good video, thank you
The trick about clicking the number in the filter range setting is probably the weirdest UI decision 😆 But I'll use it everyday now! ("came for bipartite networks, stayed for small Gephi tricks")
It's a glitch, not a UI decision; and the trick is to work around it. But we'll fix that in a later release!
It's Just WOW!!!
can you upload the dataset to some link?
The network itself can be found in the description in the link below "GEXF File". As for how to obtain that GEXF, the explanations are in the tutorial mentioned in the description, and more precisely right there: jacomyma.github.io/mapping-controversies/1.9/#data (it involves a CSV file and a Jupyter notebook, available on Google Colab)