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dagrejs

v0.2.1

Published

Layered layout for directed acyclic graph

Downloads

10,299

Readme

dagrejs - Layered layout for directed acyclic graph

This project is a fork from dagre. For more information prelase refer to origin project.

Enhanced features

New features:

  • support specify layer(rank) for certain node
  • support manually control nodes' order
  • support keep origin layout when re-layout with nodes added

Optimizations:

  • rewrite rank algorithm to support assign layer
  • consider previous iteration result at node-ordering step
  • support generate edgeLabelSpacing or not, which controls generate dummy node between nodes

Usage

For full usage please refer to dagre's documentation: https://github.com/dagrejs/dagre/wiki.

edgeLabelSpace

Default dagre always generate dummy node for every edge, which can be used for edge's curve drawing, etc. If you do not need it, disable it in layout's options:

dagre.layout(g, {
  edgeLabelSpace: false
})

Bellow shows graph with or without edgeLabelSpace:

Specify layer

Now you can manually specify node's layer(rank) by add layer in node's attribute:

const data = {
    nodes: [
        { id: '0' },
        { id: '1', layer: 1 },
        { id: '2', layer: 3 },
        { id: '3' },
    ],
    // edges: [...]
}

data.nodes.forEach((n) => {
    g.setNode(n.id, n);
});

Caution:

  • layer is 0-indexed, which means the root node's layer is 0
  • manual layer should not violate DAG's properties (e.g. You cannot assign a layer value for a target node greater or equal to cresponding source node.)

Control nodes' order

Sometimes we want to manually control nodes' order in every layer in case of unexpected result caused by alogrithm. Now we can also configurate in options.

dagre.layout(g, {
  keepNodeOrder: true,
  nodeOrder: ['3', '2', '1', '0'] // an array of nodes's ID.
});

A common usage is keeping data's order:

const data = {
    nodes: [
        { id: '0' },
        { id: '2' },
        { id: '3' },
        { id: '1' },
    ],
    // edges: [...]
}

dagre.layout(g, {
  keepNodeOrder: true,
  nodeOrder: data.nodes.map(n => n.id)
});

Caution:

  • The order only work at same layer ordering step. It does not affect the layer assignment step.
  • Like specifying layer, internally the library added fixorder attribute for each node. Of cause you can manually set this attribute, but it introduces ambiguity.

Keep origin layout

When re-layout with small modification, we may want to keep origin layout result. Now we can pass the origin graph to new layout function:

dagre.layout(originGraph) // layout() will internally modify originGraph
dagre.layout(
  g,
  {
    prevGraph: originGraph // pass originGraph to new function
  }
);

For full example please refer to add-subgraph example in examples folder.