Consider this code:
d3.selectAll("#treemap rect").on("click", function(){
msa = d3.select(this).attr('id');
console.log(msa);
});
HTML:
<div id="treemap" ...>
<rect class="node" id="cityName" ...>
<rect class="node" id="cityName" ...>
<rect class="node" id="cityName" ...>
...
</div>
Also, here is the code that creates the Tree Map structure:
var node = div.datum(newRoot[0]).selectAll(".node")
.data(treemap.nodes)
.enter().append("rect")
.attr("class", "node")
.attr("id", function(d){
return d.cityname ? d.cityname.replace(/[\W\s]/g,"")+"-"+d.stusps: null;
})...//The rest is inconsequential for this problem.
Now msa = d3.select(this).attr('class');
returns "node" which is expected. However the ID on that element is the name of a city, and the above JavaScript code returns null and I can see that the ID is there in the DOM. Why doesn't the .attr() method accept "id" as well as "class" and, how do I get at the ID?
Furthermore, I could just use another library with my stack like JQuery to grab the ID, but I want to do it using D3. It might be the purist in me ;)
I have looked here and still don't see it. Any ideas, thanks?
Update:
One suggestion was to append an SVG to the div and then create the tree map benieth the SVG tag like so:
var div = d3.select("#dashboardA").append("div")
.style("position", "relative")
.attr("id", "treemap");
div = div.append("svg")
.style("width", (width + margin.left + margin.right) + "px") //1220px
.style("height", (height + margin.top + margin.bottom) + "px") //558px
.style("margin", "auto")
.style("left", margin.left + "px")
.style("top", margin.top + "px");
Result:
The tree map is now not visible or accessible. Also, most of the examples I have found of tree maps all create the tree map with no SVG tag whatsoever. Here is an official example. Are they all wrong?
divs
indivs
, it doesn't need ansvg
tag. You are placingrects
in a div. A rect is an SVG element, it needs to be in an SVG tag.