I have a visualisation based on the force-collapsable example and I'd like to speed up or skip the initial node movements to bring the graph to equilibrium as soon as possible.
I've followed the advice in this answer and called tick() from my code but it doesn't work in the force-collabsable example because there is no tick or alpha method on the force object.
Heres what my code looks like after the modifications, I've removed the on tick call and added the force.tick() call at the end:
var force = d3.layout.force() // line 38 in the example
//.on("tick", tick) // commented out as I call tick instead
.charge(function(d) { return d._children ? -d.size / 100 : -30; })
.linkDistance(function(d) { return d.target._children ? 80 : 30; })
.size([w, h - 160]);
function update() { // line 56 in the example
var nodes = flatten(root),
links = d3.layout.tree().links(nodes);
force // line 60 in the example
.nodes(nodes)
.links(links)
.start();
force.tick() // added by me to cause a tick and the point of error
but the call fails with 'Uncaught TypeError: undefined is not a function' because the method isn't there.
The force object has the following values when I call it (taken from the Chrome debugger):
charge: function (x) {
distance: function (x) {
drag: function () {
friction: function (x) {
gravity: function (x) {
linkDistance: function (x) {
linkStrength: function (x) {
links: function (x) {
nodes: function (x) {
on: function (type, listener) {
resume: function () {
size: function (x) {
start: function () {
stop: function () {
theta: function (x) {
proto: Object
Why is the force object in this example different to other force layout examples that don't use the tree layout? How can I call tick() directly?