d3-dag
Often data sets are hierarchical, but are not in a tree structure, such as genetic data.
In these instances d3-hierarchy
may not suit your needs, which is why d3-dag
(Directed Acyclic Graph) exists.
This module implements a data structure for manipulating DAGs.
Old versions were designed to mimic d3-hierarchy
's api as much as possible, newer versions have opted to use modern javascript conventions while breaking from the standard set by d3.
Examples
Status
:warning: tl;dr this is effectively in light maintanence mode: simple feature requests may still be implemented, but I won't be trying to expand to new use cases
This project started years ago with the intention of providing a rough
framework for implementing or extending a sugiyama-style layout for small to
medium sized static DAGs. At the time, this was one of the only libraries to
support layered graph layouts in javascript. Since then many more libraries
exist, and since I no longer use it, it's been hard to actively develop.
In addition, I started this mostly for experimentation purposes, but most
people just want something reasonable out of the box, that works for most
inputs. Fully supporting that would take a different library, but fortunately
there are several: (Note this list may not be up to date, but PRs are welcome)
- graphology - a general javascript
graph library that's similar to the graph implementation provided as part of
this library.
- sigma - a graph layout library
specifically targeted at large graphs.
Installing
If you use node, npm i d3-dag
or yarn add d3-dag
.
Otherwise you can load it using unpkg
:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/d3-dag@1.1.0"></script>
<script>
const dag = d3.graphStratify(...);
const layout = d3.sugiyama();
layout(dag);
for (const node of dag.nodes()) {
console.log(node.x, node.y);
}
for (const { points } of dag.links()) {
console.log(points);
}
</script>
General Usage Notes
This library is built around the concept of operators.
Operators are functions with a fluent interface to modify their behavior.
Every function that modifies behavior returns a copy, and will not modify the original operator.
For example, the stratify
operator creates dags from id-based parent data, can be used like so:
const stratify = graphStratify();
const dag = stratify([{ id: "parent" }, { id: "child", parentIds: ["parent"] }]);
stratify.id(({ myid }: { myid: string }) => myid);
const dag = stratify([{ myid: "parent" }, { myid: "child", parentIds: ["parent"] }]);
const myStratify = stratify.id(({ myid }: { myid: string }) => myid);
const dag = myStratify([{ myid: "parent" }, { myid: "child", parentIds: ["parent"] }]);
Updating
For information about changes between releases see the changelog
.
Contributing
Contributions, issues, and PRs are all welcome!