I live well with your install.sh not beeing able to reckognize that I'm on Debian and have a slightly different layout than generic Linux. On the other hand, getting installations from outside repos into /usr/local/bin, isn't a bad choice over all.
Me not beeing used to using curl, I didn't realize that the dry run parameter to go at the end of install command. I guess most people who downloads from github gets that. A line or two on how you do a dry run, with the command line fully spelled out wouldn't hurt though.
Now that all the sour critique is out of the way, I want to repeat my thank you's, the comparative site was great, and so were the examples, and it came just in time!
I'm going to use this for small simple diagrams, and some views of ER models, I'm not into the call graph, or drawing 1000's of nodes thing at the moment, it will probably work well for that too.
My point is, that your graphs are actually simpler to define than using groff's pic macro package, or the stand-alone pic2graph utility.
oh hm, do you think the issue was that you're on Debian or something else (different layout that you refer to)? We'll be sure to test on a Debian machine in the future. Thank you for the feedback and kind words!
I live well with your install.sh not beeing able to reckognize that I'm on Debian and have a slightly different layout than generic Linux. On the other hand, getting installations from outside repos into /usr/local/bin, isn't a bad choice over all.
Me not beeing used to using curl, I didn't realize that the dry run parameter to go at the end of install command. I guess most people who downloads from github gets that. A line or two on how you do a dry run, with the command line fully spelled out wouldn't hurt though.
Now that all the sour critique is out of the way, I want to repeat my thank you's, the comparative site was great, and so were the examples, and it came just in time!
I'm going to use this for small simple diagrams, and some views of ER models, I'm not into the call graph, or drawing 1000's of nodes thing at the moment, it will probably work well for that too.
My point is, that your graphs are actually simpler to define than using groff's pic macro package, or the stand-alone pic2graph utility.
So. Thank you!!