A library for converting a list of objects into a hierarchical data structure for dTree.
About β’ Demo β’ Installation β’ Requirements β’ Usage β’ Acknowledgements β’ Technologies Used β’ License
Structuring data for dTree is hard... but not anymore! Painlessly, with just one method call, you can:
- Filter data for the following objects:
- Target
- Target's parents
- Target's siblings (that share both parents)
- Target's children (where target is listed a parent)
- Target's spouses (where listed as other parent of a child)
- Target's descendents (grandchildren, children's spouses, great-grandchildren, etc.)
- Dynamically set CSS classes and custom render data for each node
- Return a hierarchical data structure, formatted as specified by dTree's README
Before
[
{
"id": 0,
"name": "Father",
"parent1Id": null,
"parent2Id": null
},
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Mother",
"parent1Id": null,
"parent2Id": null
},
{
"id": 2,
"name": "Child",
"parent1Id": 0,
"parent2Id": 1
}
]
After
[
{
"id": 0,
"name": "Father",
"depthOffset": 1,
"marriages": [{
"spouse": {
"id": 1,
"name": "Mother",
"depthOffset": 1
},
"children": [{
"id": 2,
"name": "Child",
"depthOffset": 2
}]
}],
"extra": {}
}
]
Check out how dTree-Seed can be used to recreate the dTree sample on JSFiddle.
There are a few ways to start working with dTree-Seed, all of which globally expose the dSeeder
variable:
- Manually download the compiled file
dSeeder.js
from dist to your appropriate project folder and load using a relative path:
<script src="/path/to/dSeeder.js"></script>
- Use
<script>
to reference the code through jsDelivr's CDN:
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/dSeeder.min.js"></script>
- Install as a package via npm with the following command:
npm install dtree-seed
dTree-Seed has no dependencies itself as it's just a data processor. However, it's intended for use with dTree v2.4.1, which requires the following:
<!-- required for dTree -->
<script src="https://d3js.org/d3.v4.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/lodash/4.17.4/lodash.min.js"></script>
<!-- load dTree -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/dTree.min.js"></script>
To preprocess your data for dTree, use the dSeeder.seed()
command:
seededData = dSeeder.seed(data, targetId, options);
dTree.init(seededData); // command provided by dTree
The data
object should be an array
of object
s, each of which should have at least these properties:
[{
id: number,
name: "Hugh Mann", // optional, but recommended
parent1Id: number, // use null for no value
parent2Id: number // use null for no value
}]
Note: if parent1Id
or parent2Id
references an id
, but no object in data
contains that id
, an error will be thrown. In such cases, please set that property to null
.
See Member for the Typescript interface for objects in data.
The targetId
is the id
of the object you wish to build your tree around.
Add callbacks
to the options
object to dyanmically set the corresponding class
, textClass
, and extra
properties for each node.
Each callback takes a member
object, which is an object in your data.
{
class: (member) => string, // sets CSS class of each node
textClass: (member) => string, // sets CSS class of text in each node
extra: (member) => object // sets extra object, custom data for renders
}
options
is an optional parameter, when no callbacks are used, class
and textClass
will default to an empty string and extra
to an empty object for each node.
See SeederOptions for its Typescript interface.
π‘ Examples
If your objects have an ageInYears
property that cooresponds with a
CSS class named minor
for people younger than 18,
you can conditionally set the CSS of the node using the class
callback:
{
class: (member) => {
if (member.ageInYears < 18)
return "minor";
}
}
If you want to set the same CSS class fw-bold
for all node text,
return a static value using the textClass
callback:
{
textClass: (member) => "fw-bold"
}
If you have properties on each member
you want to persist on each node in the tree,
you can pass them into an object using extra
callback:
{
extra: (member) => {
return {
height: member.height,
ageInYears: member.ageInYears,
favoriteColor: member.favoriteColor
};
}
}
The extra
object is passed to dTree's callbacks
, the above properties would accessbile on the extra
parameter using extra.height
, extra.ageInYears
, and extra.favoriteColor
.
For the above examples, here's what the data
might look like:
[{
id: 0,
parent1Id: null,
parent2Id: null,
name: "Father",
ageInYears: 26,
height: "5ft 9in"
favoriteColor: "Green"
},
{
id: 1,
parent1Id: null,
parent2Id: null,
name: "Mother",
ageInYears: 24,
height: "5ft 6in",
favoriteColor: "Blue"
},
{
id: 2,
parent1Id: 0,
parent2Id: 1,
name: "Child",
ageInYears: 1,
height: "2ft 5in",
favoriteColor: null
}];
For more examples on how to use the options object, check out its unit tests.
π§π» Erik GΓ€rtner for writing and sharing dTree
π©πΏβπ« Microsoft Learn for teaching me Typescript
- Typescript - Javascript superset
- Mochajs - testing framework
- Chaijs - assertion library
- VSCode - code editor
Copyright (c) 2022 Justin M Heartley