I am trying to find the correct method to be able to save out a force diagram node layout positions once settled, then later, to reload that layout and start again from the same settled state.
I am trying to do this by cloning the DOM elements containing the diagram, removing it and then reloading it.
This I can do, in part as indicated below:-
_clone = $('#chart').clone(true,true);
$('#chart').remove();
Selects the containing div, clones it and removes it, then later
var _target = $('#p1content');
_target.append(_clone);
Selects the div
that used to hold the chart and reloads it. Reloaded diagram is fixed.
I don't know how to reconnect the force to allow manipulation to carry on. Is this possible? I want to preserve the settled position of the nodes.
Another possibility, could I reload the node positions and start the force with a low alpha?
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>D3: Force layout</title>
<script src="./jquery-2.0.3.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../d3.v3.js"></script>
<style type="text/css">
/* No style rules here yet */
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div data-role="content" id="p1content">
<div id="chart"></div>
</div>
<script type="text/javascript">
//Width and height
var w = 800;
var h = 600;
//Original data
var dataset = {
nodes: [
{ name: "Adam" },
{ name: "Bob" },
{ name: "Carrie" },
{ name: "Donovan" },
{ name: "Edward" },
{ name: "Felicity" },
{ name: "George" },
{ name: "Hannah" },
{ name: "Iris" },
{ name: "Jerry" }
],
edges: [
{ source: 0, target: 1 },
{ source: 0, target: 2 },
{ source: 0, target: 3 },
{ source: 0, target: 4 },
{ source: 1, target: 5 },
{ source: 2, target: 5 },
{ source: 2, target: 5 },
{ source: 3, target: 4 },
{ source: 5, target: 8 },
{ source: 5, target: 9 },
{ source: 6, target: 7 },
{ source: 7, target: 8 },
{ source: 8, target: 9 }
]
};
//Initialize a default force layout, using the nodes and edges in dataset
var force = d3.layout.force()
.nodes(dataset.nodes)
.links(dataset.edges)
.size([w, h])
.linkDistance([100])
.charge([-100])
.start();
var colors = d3.scale.category10();
//Create SVG element
var svg = d3.select("#chart")
.append("svg")
.attr("width", w)
.attr("height", h);
//Create edges as lines
var edges = svg.selectAll("line")
.data(dataset.edges)
.enter()
.append("line")
.style("stroke", "#ccc")
.style("stroke-width", 1);
//Create nodes as circles
var nodes = svg.selectAll("circle")
.data(dataset.nodes)
.enter()
.append("circle")
.attr("r", 10)
.style("fill", function(d, i) {
return colors(i);
})
.call(force.drag);
//Every time the simulation "ticks", this will be called
force.on("tick", function() {
edges.attr("x1", function(d) { return d.source.x; })
.attr("y1", function(d) { return d.source.y; })
.attr("x2", function(d) { return d.target.x; })
.attr("y2", function(d) { return d.target.y; });
nodes.attr("cx", function(d) { return d.x; })
.attr("cy", function(d) { return d.y; });
});
// After 5 secs clone and remove DOM elements
setTimeout(function() {
_clone = $('#chart').clone(true,true);
$('#chart').remove();
}, 5000);
//After 10 secs reload DOM
setTimeout(function() {
var _target = $('#p1content');
_target.append(_clone);
// WHAT NEEDS TO GO HERE TO RECOUPLE THE FORCE?
}, 10000);
</script>
</body>
</html>
Added this where I put // WHAT NEEDS TO GO HERE TO RECOUPLE THE FORCE?
This seems to work picking up the existing elements restored and recouples the Force where it left off passing the force nodes etc into the Timeout function
force = d3.layout.force()
.nodes(dataset.nodes)
.links(dataset.edges)
.size([w, h])
.linkDistance([100])
.charge([-100])
.start();
colors = d3.scale.category10();
//Create SVG element
svg = d3.select("#chart");
//Create edges as lines
edges = svg.selectAll("line")
.data(dataset.edges);
//Create nodes as circles
nodes = svg.selectAll("circle")
.data(dataset.nodes)
.call(force.drag);
//Every time the simulation "ticks", this will be called
force.on("tick", function() {
edges.attr("x1", function(d) { return d.source.x; })
.attr("y1", function(d) { return d.source.y; })
.attr("x2", function(d) { return d.target.x; })
.attr("y2", function(d) { return d.target.y; });
nodes.attr("cx", function(d) { return d.x; })
.attr("cy", function(d) { return d.y; });
});
nodes
andlinks
arrays that d3.js is using and then, when reloading your script, use that as the data to compute the layout instead of calling the original data source. If you post your script I can try and explain this a little bit better.