Display your organization structure in style, personalize and use the chart type of your choice and that fits your organization, and more. Built with D3js and TypeScript.
npm i treespider
After installation you can either import treeSpider directly in your application or load it via the script tag, it has both ES6 and browser bundles.
import TreeSpider from '/path/to/installation/folder/dist/es/treeSpider.bundle.min.js'
const instance1 = new TreeSpider({
targetContainer: '#container-1'
})
<div id="container-1"></div>
<!-- .... --->
<script src="/path/to/installation/folder/dist/browser/treeSpider.bundle.min.js"></script>
<script>
const instance1 = new TreeSpider({
targetContainer: '#container-1'
});
</script>
After importing it or loading it with the script tag, add the CSS file
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/path/to/installation/folder/dist/css/treeSpider.css">
And that is it, you will see treeSpider running in the browser with random automatically generated data, and one cool thing is there is no limit to the number of TreeSpider instances that can be on a page, next, add your organization's employee data.
The treeSpider data structure is linear and simple, each employee has a parent ID which is the id of the department head to whom each employee reports to and the head of the organization doesn't have an ID, and it is required to have one and only one data that doesn't have a parent id which is going to serve as the overall head of the organization or the organization's name in an organization where there's no particular person as the head, the data is an array in the following format
{
id: string;
parentId: string;
name: string;
role: string;
location: string;
image: string;
}
All properties of the data except the id
are optional, but it is recommended that the name should contain at least one name either first and/or last name, check the documentation for more info on the properties.
This is an example of an organization's employee data
const tree_data = [
{id: "1", name: "Abayomi Amusa", role: "Manager", location: "Lagos, Nigeria"},
{id: "2", parentId: "1", name: "Trey Anderson", role: "Product Manager", location: "California, United States"},
{id: "3", parentId: "1", name: "Troy Manuel", role: "Software Developer", location: "Alberta, Canada"},
{id: "4", parentId: "1", name: "Rebecca Oslon", role: "Software Developer", location: "London, United Kingdom"},
{id: "5", parentId: "1", name: "David Scheg", role: "Product Designer", location: "Jiaozian, China"},
{id: "6", parentId: "2", name: "James Zucks", role: "DevOps", location: "Accra, Ghana"},
{id: "7", parentId: "2", name: "Zu Po Xe", role: "Backend Developer", location: "Johanesburg, South Africa"},
{id: "8", parentId: "2", name: "Scott Ziagler", role: "FrontEnd Developer Intern"},
{id: "9", parentId: "7", name: "Xervia Allero", role: "FrontEnd Developer Intern"},
{id: "10", parentId: "3", name: "Adebowale Ajanlekoko", role: "Fullstack Developer"},
]
const instance1 = new TreeSpider({
targetContainer: '#container-1',
tree_data: tree_data
})
This is going to display the employee data with the default settings, the default tree type, default chart head, default chart link and pallet and all of them can be set, changed or tuned to meet your need, see few of the options below.
TreeSpider can be personalized to your taste, TreeSpider currently has 7 tree types including the default and 3 chart head types including the default, there is also a color pallet for the chart head for personalizing the chart head. For example displaying the data with the hSpiderWalk
tree and with the landscape
chart head.
const chart = new TreeSpider({
targetContainer: '#chart-container',
tree_data: tree_data,
chart_head_type: 'landscape',
tree_type: 'hSpiderWalk',
pallet: {
darker: .8,
gray: 10
},
// random_data_length: 500, // set the number of random automatically generated employee data
})
See the options documentation for a list of all the options.
You can also programmatically interract with TreeSpider through the methods, example, the method to programatically initialize the library.
const chart = new TreeSpider({
// ...
autoInitialize: false
})
document.querySelector('#random-button').onclick = () => chart.initialize()
The autoInitialize: false
tells TreeSpider to not initialize by default, and it gets initialized once the initialize
method has been called.
See the Methods documentation for all the available methods.
Events can be subscribed to with the addEventListener
or with the on
method, example
const chart = new TreeSpider({
//...
})
// using the `on` method
chart.on('library.init', (e) => {
console.log("the library has been initialized", e)
})
// using the addEventListener
chart.on('chart_head.create', (e) => {
console.log("a chart head has been created", e)
})
See the documentation for more.
Created with ❤️ by Abayomi Amusa