46

I am using the following code:

$("#treeview").jstree();
$("#treeview").jstree('open_all');

With the following html:

<div id="treeview">
  <ul>
    <li>
      <a href="#">RTB</a>
      <ul>
        <li>
          <a href="#" onclick="goTo('index.php?module=alarm&amp;pagina=dashboard&amp;id=6',false);">Beneden</a>
        </li>
        <li>
          <a href="#" onclick="goTo('index.php?module=alarm&amp;pagina=dashboard&amp;id=7',false);">Boven</a>
        </li>
      </ul>
    </li>
  </ul>
</div>

My problem is that all nodes stay closed, I can't get them to open with jstree('open_all');.

3
  • can you post your generated HTML instead of Smarty? Jun 13, 2012 at 15:33
  • Comment by @Mr.sinoser Note: when you use jQuery .on() method you should check your add jQuery core!! because this method is ready on jQuery 1.7 and upper and While the .bind() method existing in jQuery 1.0 (Copied from answers, answer flagged for deletion)
    – Pred
    Oct 3, 2014 at 12:13
  • In my case, it simply worked with the statement $("#treeview").jstree('open_all'); as indicated in this link Oct 11, 2021 at 16:40

9 Answers 9

64

The jsTree documentation is "sub optimal". The docs don't clearly state that the initialization works asynchronously. There's core.loaded():

A dummy function, whose purpose is only to trigger the loaded event. This event is triggered once after the tree's root nodes are loaded, but before any nodes set in initially_open are opened.

This suggests an event loaded.jstree is fired after the tree is setup. You can hook into that event to open all your nodes:

var $treeview = $("#treeview");
$treeview
  .jstree(options)
  .on('loaded.jstree', function() {
    $treeview.jstree('open_all');
  });
4
  • 1
    I was having the opposite problem after using this code. I ended up adding another call to jstree('open_all') after the "on" call because chrome finished the tree before the event registration Dec 9, 2013 at 19:04
  • Does this answer still work? I can't seem to get it to work for my tree, although it seems pretty straight forward.
    – Smoore
    Mar 24, 2014 at 20:54
  • 10
    Note atmelino's answer below, on version 3 "ready.jstree" instead of "loaded.jstree" will accomplish the task.
    – JonK
    Feb 18, 2015 at 22:21
  • 2
    This did not work for me - check answer below for "ready.jstree" action.
    – xil3
    Oct 14, 2016 at 12:47
36

I am using version 3 of jstree and Chrome. The loaded event did not work for me, but the ready event did, even after the jstree instance was created:

$('#treeview').on('ready.jstree', function() {
    $("#treeview").jstree("open_all");          
});

http://www.jstree.com/api/#/?q=.jstree%20Event&f=ready.jstree

1
  • 1
    This worked for me, whereas the accepted answer did not.
    – xil3
    Oct 14, 2016 at 12:46
21

If you want open all node when tree loaded:

$("#treeview")
    // call `.jstree` with the options object
    .jstree({
        "plugins" : ["themes", "html_data","ui","crrm","sort"]
    }) 
    .bind("loaded.jstree", function (event, data) {
        // you get two params - event & data - check the core docs for a detailed description
        $(this).jstree("open_all");
    })      
});
2
  • 4
    For the original poster's sake, it helps to give a bit more of an explanation why this would work - i.e. in this case explaining that .jstree() runs asynchronously and fires an event when it's ready.
    – Stu Cox
    Sep 23, 2012 at 22:17
  • 2
    Thanks for the code, it works fine for me, btw, you have an extra }) in the code. Feb 3, 2014 at 16:41
10

all the answers above not work in my workspace. I searched again and find this link(Why doesn't jsTree open_all() work for me?) is helpful, and post my answer:

jstree version: 3.0.0-bata10

$(document).ready(function() {
  $("#tree").bind("loaded.jstree", function(event, data) { 
    data.instance.open_all();
  });
  $("#tree").jstree();
})
1
  • simply bind ready.jstree as atmelino mentioned and problem solved
    – mikus
    Jun 22, 2016 at 10:29
3

I tried all the answers here and they didn't work with jsTree (v3.3.4). What worked is the load_node.jstree event:

    .on( 'load_node.jstree', function () {
      jstree.jstree( "open_all" );
    } )
2

When using html data 'you can set the jstree-open class on any <li> element to make it initially extended, so that its children are visible.' - https://www.jstree.com/docs/html/

<li class="jstree-open" id="node_1">My Open Node</li>
1

use simple code

$(".jstree").jstree().on('loaded.jstree', function () {
     $(".jstree").jstree('open_all');
})
0

You can also apply animation to the opening and closing like so:

$(document)
    .on("click", "#open-all-folders", function () {
        // param1 set to null to open/close all nodes
        // param2 is the duration in milliseconds
        $("#tree-ref").jstree().open_all(null, 200);
    })
    .on("click", "#close-all-folders", function () {
        $("#tree-ref").jstree().close_all(null, 200);
    });

(or similarly apply to .on('ready.jstree', function() { // code here } );

-1
.bind("loaded.jstree", function (event, data) {
        // you get two params - event & data - check the core docs for a detailed description
        $(this).jstree("open_all");
    }) 

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