Howto: Make a relationship chart/he
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Contents
- 1 Before you start
- 2 Filters: what persons to print ?
- 3 Example 1-A: a descendant chart
- 4 Example 1-B: a chart with ancestors
- 5 Example 2: A chart with ancestors, descendants and their families
- 6 Example 3: Generating the graph by using the Graphviz command line tool
- 7 Printing large graphs
- 8 Troubleshooting
- 9 Additional things to try
- 10 Help improve the Graph reports
- 11 See also
Before you start
The Relationship graph report uses the GraphViz backend, which should already be installed, if not you will need to install GraphViz (on linux, use your package manager).
Gramps can produce charts, but to view them, you need other programs. We recommend that you install the following:
- GraphViz: required for the creation of the relationship charts
- Inkscape: for viewing and editing svg charts, export to png
- gv, kghostview: for viewing ps charts
- ps2pdf: for converting ps to pdf
- adobe reader, kpdf: for viewing pdf charts
- LibreOffice or OpenOffice or Calligra: for viewing odt documents
Filters: what persons to print ?
What are filters?
In Gramps you can define filters to make a selection of individuals, see Examples of filters. In the relationship chart all custom person filters you made will be available, as well as the standard descendants and ancestors filters. These last start from the active person.
Tip You can add stepchildren to a family by setting the Relationship to Mother (or Father) for the child to stepchild in the Child Reference Editor. The other parent's Relationship should remain set to Birth. In doing so, these children will become part of a descendant report without the need to create a custom filter to include them. |
How many people ?
Your filter can contain as many people as you want. Note however that printing or viewing of large charts can be very problematic.
Example 1-A: a descendant chart
Use the example.gramps that came with your install, or download example.gramps, save to a file, create a new database in Gramps called example, and import the example.gramps data into it.
If not the case, set the active person to Garner von Zieliński, Lewis Anderson Sr.
To make a descendant chart with the relationship report, choose the menu item Reports -> Graphs -> Relationship Graph...
In the Bottom dialog:
- Document Options set the Output Format to .png
Chose the following in the tabs available:
- Paper Options -> Size : Custom Size (Set width and height to 10000 cm, or some other large value)
- Report Options -> Filter: Descendants of Garner von Zieliński, Lewis Anderson Sr
- GraphViz Layout-> Graph Direction: Horizontal (<-)
- GraphViz Options-> Aspect ratio: Compress to minimal size
Select OK to generate the chart.
The result can be seen to the right. You can use print this on a dedicated printer (If required change the GraphViz Options DPI of png file.), or if you use the default DPI of 72 you can use this image on a website to share. In the last example below, you can use the tip explained in Make flash plugin from a png, to make the resulting graph easier to navigate.
In the chart image, males are blue, females are pink and the yellow balloons indicate a family node in which a marriage date is printed (if known). You can select not to see this family node by deselecting in the Graph Style tab the option Show family nodes.
Example 1-B: a chart with ancestors
Download and open the example.gramps file as in Example 1-A
Set Warner, Carl Thomas to be the active person.
Repeat the process in Example 1-A, but choose the filter Ancestors of Warner, Carl Thomas this time.
You can see the result to the right.
This is already an extremely large graph.
It can only be readily viewed in a good image viewer.
For printing you need to resort to printing on several pages, or you need access to a large plotter.
Example 2: A chart with ancestors, descendants and their families
This article's content is incomplete or a placeholder stub. |
Note: This example uses filters. See Examples of filters for an introductory example. |
Open the file example.gramps and select Cristiansen, Frances as the active person.
First we create a helper filter: Open the filter editor and create a new filter, called Frances1. The filter should contain the rules
- Ancestors of <person> choose Christiansen, Frances and check inclusive.
- Descendants of <person> chose Christiansen, Frances
Make sure that "At least one rule must be fulfilled" is chosen, so that we get both ancestors and descendants!
Now we create the filter we will actually use for the report. It will be based on the previous filter: Create a new filter, called Frances2. This filter should contain the rules:
- People matching the filter, choose Frances1
- Parents of filter Frances1
- Siblings of filter Frances1
- Spouses of filter Frances1
Now close the filter editor, and follow the instructions given in Examples 1a and 1b, but this time choosing the filter Frances2 in the Report Options tab.
The result is visible to the right (363kb, large file !)
Example 3: Generating the graph by using the Graphviz command line tool
Tips Some tips around GraphViz are available. |
In the menu, select Reports -> Graphs -> Relationship Graph....
In the Bottom dialog:
- Document Options set the Output Format to Graphviz file, which defaults to the gv extension. This file is then a dot file which can be processed by Graphviz.
Eg, to make from the gv file a ps file, Gramps uses:
dot -Tps:cairo -o"file.ps" "file.gv"
for svg:
dot -Tsvg -o"file.svg" "file.gv"
Choose the filter you want to use, and set also as many of the other options as possible to the desired values (as explained in Example 1-A)
This file is a text file, so it can be opened in any text-editor.
Manual changes
The Graphviz .gv dot file is a text file with a well documented structure, (See: graphviz.org/documentation )
digraph GRAMPS_graph { bgcolor=white; center="true"; charset="utf8"; concentrate="false"; dpi="72"; graph [fontsize=14]; ....
then the actual Gramps data are shown:
I0585 [ shape="box" fillcolor="#e0e0ff" style="solid,filled" label="Kristensen, John Francis\"Chick\"\n(1889-10-10 - 1938-10-23)" ];
You can optimize the layout by making changes in the file.
- For paper size: look for the "page" (paper size) and "size" (area of paper to use), and change these to some large values. This is important as otherwise the figure will be wrongly scaled and the picture quality will be poor (eg unreadable text).
- You can also change the font by adding a font family. Look for the lines
node [style=filled fontsize="12"];
- and change that into eg
node [style=filled fontsize="12" fontname="Sans"];
- to use the Sans font. On the command line you will see which ttf font Graphviz finds on your PC (using the verbose flag, see below).
Generation of the Image
Save the modified file under the name report.dot, and run the command
dot -Tpng -oreport.png report.dot
This should use the graphviz "dot" tool to generate the .png file containing the report.
To see information messages (like font) use the -v flag. You can also output other image formats, eg, for jpeg with verbose output:
dot -Tjpg -oreport.jpg report.dot -v
... Activated plugin library: libgvplugin_pango.so.5 Using textlayout: textlayout:cairo Activated plugin library: libgvplugin_dot_layout.so.5 Using layout: dot:dot_layout Using render: cairo:cairo Activated plugin library: libgvplugin_gd.so.5 Using device: jpg:cairo:gd The plugin configuration file: /usr/lib/graphviz/config4 was successfully loaded. render : cairo dot fig gd map ps svg vml vrml xdot layout : circo dot fdp neato nop nop1 nop2 twopi textlayout : textlayout device : canon cmap cmapx cmapx_np dia dot fig gd gd2 gif hpgl imap imap_np ismap jpe jpeg jpg mif mp pcl pdf pic plain plain-ext png ps ps2 svg svgz vml vmlz vrml vtx wbmp xdot xlib loadimage : (lib) gd gd2 gif jpe jpeg jpg png ps dot: fontname "Times-Roman" resolved to: "Times New Roman, Normal" /usr/share/fonts/truetype/msttcorefonts/Times_New_Roman.ttf network simplex: 11 nodes 10 edges 0 iter 0.00 sec mincross: pass 0 iter 0 trying 0 cur_cross 0 best_cross 0 mincross GRAMPS_graph: 0 crossings, 0.00 secs. network simplex: 23 nodes 37 edges 7 iter 0.00 sec routesplines: 10 edges, 30 boxes 0.00 sec Using render: cairo:cairo Using device: jpg:cairo:gd ...
Printing large graphs
If you want to print large graphs (especially with photos and other details) in reasonable readable quality, the following steps should work:
- In Document Options choose SVG as output format.
- Setup paper format to fit graph into one sheet (SVG cannot handle more than one sheet), so choose A0 or custom size.
- Use Inkscape for opening SVG graph.
- Menu File/Document properties, use "Fit page to selection" function (fix size accordingly to graph size).
- Menu File/Save as, choose PDF format.
You now have a large poster you could print. Inkscape cannot tile PDF for printing large graphs on many A4/A3 sheets, so you must use another software to do it for you. At home, you can print this on multiple A4/A3 sheets with other programs:
- In Linux, the poster command line utility can split a poster over A4/A3/Letter.
- Install it via your package manager (or on CLI type for eg Ubuntu: sudo apt-get install poster
- Read the man page, to eg split an A0 poster which is in postscript format, over 16 A4 do:
poster -iA0 -mA4 -pA0 posterA0.ps > posterA4.ps
- For Linux, Windows and Mac, you can also use the program PosterRazor, which has an easy to use interface.
- For Windows, you can use Govert's PDF Tiler (can maybe run on Linux too using Mono, needs .NET 1.1)
Troubleshooting
- If you encounter bad fonts (missing characters) or wrong fontsizes, see Example 3 on how you can set the font yourself.
- If you have missing lines in Relationship (and other similar) Graph pdf output; then use a larger paper size (or use multiple pages).(See 10028)
- If you have a bad resolution of png, eg unreadable text, this is probably because you have set a paper size which is to small. See Example 1-A: set the papersize of number of pages to a high number, but select in GraphViz Options, in Aspect ratio: Fill the given area, or use Compress to minimal size
Reports and custom IDs After a GEDCOM import, your database can use some non-standard IDs (ie. 123I or 456U not set on Edit --> Preferences --> ID Formats). If generated reports do not properly display data, then try Reorder Gramps IDs tool (Tools->Family Tree Processing->Reorder Gramps IDs). |
Additional things to try
- You can make descendant charts and add them to the media gallery of the person. Like that, the chart is available from the website.
- Offer a chart on your website as a flash relationship graph, enabling zooming, moving, ... over your data or just use SVG for Firefox and Chrome, see DenominoViso
Help improve the Graph reports
If you examine the dot specifications, you will note that much more can be done with GraphViz output. If you have programming skills you can add some functionality:
- Improved text in the boxes: what text and how to organize it?
- Coloring. See the Family Lines Graph: for a color per family, for specific relations, for the central person, ...