Reputation: 1970
I'm sure there's a really simple elegant way to do this but I can't quite figure it out. I have some input data that looks like this:
[
{id: 1, name: "Peter"},
{id: 2, name: "Paul", manager: 1},
{id: 3, name: "Mary", manager: 1},
{id: 4, name: "John", manager: 2},
{id: 5, name: "Jane", manager: 2}
]
If possible, I would like to use the d3.js nest operator to get a structure to use in the hierarchy layout. Like this:
[
{name: "Peter", children: [
{name:"Paul", children: [
{name:"John"},
{name:"Jane"}
]},
{name:"Mary"}
]
}
]
Upvotes: 10
Views: 7548
Reputation: 51819
You can't use the nest operator here because nesting produces a fixed hierarchy: the number of levels in the output hierarchy is the same as the number of key functions you specify.
That said, you can write your own function which produces a tree. Assuming that the root node is the first node in the input array, you can create a map from id to node, and then construct the tree lazily.
function tree(nodes) {
var nodeById = {};
// Index the nodes by id, in case they come out of order.
nodes.forEach(function(d) {
nodeById[d.id] = d;
});
// Lazily compute children.
nodes.forEach(function(d) {
if ("manager" in d) {
var manager = nodeById[d.manager];
if (manager.children) manager.children.push(d);
else manager.children = [d];
}
});
return nodes[0];
}
If you know that the nodes are listed in order such that managers appear before their reports, you can simplify the code to iterate only once.
Upvotes: 15