New 2017-Oct-16: master is now webtreemap v2, a complete rewrite with bug fixes, more features, and a different (simpler) API. If you're looking for the old webtreemap, see the v1 branch.
A simple treemap implementation using web technologies (DOM nodes, CSS styling and transitions) rather than a big canvas/svg/plugin. It's usable as a library as part of a larger web app, but it also includes a command-line app that dumps a self-contained HTML file that displays a map.
Play with a demo.
The data format is a tree of Node
, where each node is an object in the shape
described at the top of tree.ts.
<script src='webtreemap.js'></script>
<script>
// Container must have its own width/height.
const container = document.getElementById('myContainer');
// See typings for full API definition.
webtreemap.render(container, data, options);
Option | Type | Default |
---|---|---|
padding | [number, number, number, number] | [14, 3, 3, 3] |
lowerBound | number | 0.1 |
applyMutations | (node: Node) => void | () => void |
caption | (node: Node) => string | (node) => node.id |
showNode | (node: Node, width: number, height: number) => boolean | (_, width, height) => (width > 20) && (height >= options.padding[0]) |
showChildren | (node: Node, width: number, height: number) => boolean | (_, width, height) => (width > 40) && (height > 40) |
Option | Description |
---|---|
padding | In order: padding-top, padding-right, padding-bottom, padding-left of each node |
lowerBound | Lower bound of ratio that determines how many children can be displayed inside of a node. Example with a lower bound of 0.1: the total area taken up by displaying child nodes of any given node cannot be less than 10% of the area of its parent node. |
applyMutations | A function that exposes a node as an argument after it's dom element has been assigned. Use this to add inline styles and classes. Example: (node) => { node.dom.style.color = 'blue' } |
caption | A function that takes a node as an argument and returns a string that is used to display as the caption for the node passed in. |
showNode | A function that takes a node, its width, and its height, and returns a boolean that determines if that node should be displayed. Fires after showChildren. |
showChildren | A function that takes a node, its width, and its height, and returns a boolean that determines if that node's children should be displayed. Fires before showNode. |
Install with
$ npm i webtreemap
Then run with:
$ webtreemap -o output_file < my_data
Input data format is space-separated lines of "size path", where size is a number and path is a '/'-delimited path. For example:
$ cat my_data
100 all
50 all/thing1
25 all/thing2
This is exactly the output produced by du
, so this works:
$ du -ab some_path | webtreemap -o out.html
But note that there's nothing file-system-specific about the data format -- it just uses slash as a nesting delimiter.
The modules of webtreemap can be used both from the web and from the command line, so the build has two layers. The command line app embeds the output of the build into its output so it's a bit confusing.
To build everything, run yarn run build
.
To hack on webtreemap, the pieces of the build are:
yarn run tsc
builds all the.ts
files;yarn run webpack
builds the UMD web version from JS of the above.
Because command line embeds the web version in its output, you need to run step 2 before running the output of step 1. Also note we intentionally don't use webpack's ts-loader because we want the TypeScript output for the command-line app.
Use yarn run tsc -w
to keep the npm-compatible JS up to date, then run e.g.:
$ du -ab node_modules/ | node build/src/cli.js --title 'node_modules usage' -o demo.html
webtreemap is licensed under the Apache License v2.0. See LICENSE.txt
for the
complete license text.