Cannot read properties of null (reading 'isHeadless') while using cytoscape's layout extensions - cytoscape.js

I was trying to use "cose-bilkent" layout extension in my react app, when the layout name was changed to "cose-bilkent" from inbuilt "grid" , it throws an error saying
"Cannot read properties of null (reading 'isHeadless')"
Since I am running this on an online code editor, headless shall be false as stated by the document:
To explicitly run a headless instance (e.g. in the browser) you can specify options.headless as true.
So I tried giving "headless:false" explicitly yet I am still getting the same error. I also tried other libraries such as spread, cola to cross check it , I am getting the same console error when I run it.
When navigated to the Line number of cytoscape.cjs.js 18789.35 it has the the following similar code
headless : function () : this.__privateRenderer.isHeadless()
import "./styles.css";
import { useRef, useEffect } from "react";
import cytoscape from "cytoscape";
import COSEBilkent from "cytoscape-cose-bilkent";
import cola from "cytoscape-cola";
import spread from "cytoscape-spread";
import CytoscapeComponent from "react-cytoscapejs";
import Cytoscape from "cytoscape";
Cytoscape.use(cola);
export default function App() {
const containerRef = useRef(null);
useEffect(() => {
const config = {
container: containerRef.current,
layout: {
name: "cola"
},
zoom: 1,
elements: {
nodes: [
{ data: { id: "1", label: "IP 1", type: "ip" } },
{ data: { id: "2", label: "Device 1", type: "device" } },
{ data: { id: "3", label: "IP 2", type: "ip" } },
{ data: { id: "4", label: "Device 2", type: "device" } },
{ data: { id: "5", label: "Device 3", type: "device" } },
{ data: { id: "6", label: "IP 3", type: "ip" } },
{ data: { id: "7", label: "Device 5", type: "device" } },
{ data: { id: "8", label: "Device 6", type: "device" } },
{ data: { id: "9", label: "Device 7", type: "device" } },
{ data: { id: "10", label: "Device 8", type: "device" } },
{ data: { id: "11", label: "Device 9", type: "device" } },
{ data: { id: "12", label: "IP 3", type: "ip" } },
{ data: { id: "13", label: "Device 10", type: "device" } }
],
edges: [
{
data: { source: "1", target: "2", label: "Node2" }
},
{
data: { source: "3", target: "4", label: "Node4" }
},
{
data: { source: "3", target: "5", label: "Node5" }
},
{
data: { source: "6", target: "5", label: " 6 -> 5" }
},
{
data: { source: "6", target: "7", label: " 6 -> 7" }
},
{
data: { source: "6", target: "8", label: " 6 -> 8" }
},
{
data: { source: "6", target: "9", label: " 6 -> 9" }
},
{
data: { source: "3", target: "13", label: " 3 -> 13" }
}
]
},
pannable: true,
position: {
// the model position of the node (optional on init, mandatory after)
x: 600,
y: 100
},
style: [
// the stylesheet for the graph
{
selector: "node",
style: {
"text-valign": "center",
"background-color": "#9D2F2E",
label: "data(id)"
}
},
{
selector: "edge",
style: {
width: 6,
"line-color": "#ccc",
"target-arrow-color": "#dfr",
"target-arrow-shape": "triangle",
"curve-style": "bezier",
label: "data(label)"
}
}
]
};
cytoscape(config);
}, []);
return <div ref={containerRef} style={{ height: "100vh", width: "100vw" }} />;
}
Above is the code that I am running.
Please drop in any inputs you have or any word on if I am going wrong somewhere.
Thanks in advance!

If you still unresolved this problem.
Try rewriting below code.
const cy = cytoscape(config)
cy.layout({
name: 'cola'
}).run()
Then, remove or change this your code.
layout: {
name: "cola"
},
You need to setting other layout options(ex. random, concentric...)
https://js.cytoscape.org/#layouts
reference(about layout.run)
Note that you must call layout.run() in order for it to affect the graph.
https://js.cytoscape.org/#layout.run

Related

Filtering array and display only filtered items

I am working on my website which will have my CV.
So I have an array of objects with hard and soft skills
skills: [
{ id: "1", type: "hard", title: "Technical skills" },
{ id: "2", type: "hard", title: "Computer skills" },
{ id: "3", type: "hard", title: "Microsoft Office skills" },
{ id: "4", type: "hard", title: "Analytical skills" },
{ id: "5", type: "hard", title: "Marketing skills" },
{ id: "6", type: "hard", title: "Presentation skills" },
{ id: "7", type: "hard", title: "Management skills" },
{ id: "8", type: "hard", title: "Project management skills" },
{ id: "9", type: "hard", title: "Writing skills" },
{ id: "10", type: "hard", title: "Language skills" },
{ id: "11", type: "hard", title: "Design skills" },
{ id: "12", type: "soft", title: "Leadership Skills" },
{ id: "13", type: "soft", title: "Teamwork" },
{ id: "14", type: "soft", title: "Communication Skills" },
{ id: "15", type: "soft", title: "Problem-Solving Skills" },
{ id: "16", type: "soft", title: "Work Ethic" },
{ id: "17", type: "soft", title: "Flexibility/Adaptability" },
{ id: "18", type: "soft", title: "Interpersonal Skills" },
],
And so I have two li's. So I need to display only hard skills in the first li and only soft skills in the second li.
Yes I know it'd be much easier if I just make 2 arrays and cycle through them for each one of li's, but I want to kinda challenge myself and filter the array. Obviously filter by the "type". So the return has to be an array, so I can cycle through it to display the data.
You can for example use two computed:
computed: {
hardSkills() {
return this.skills.filter(skill => skill.type === 'hard');
},
softSkills() {
return this.skills.filter(skill => skill.type === 'soft');
}
}
You could create the 2 arrays with a simple filter like this
const hardSkills = skills.filter(skill => skill.type === 'hard')
const softSkills = skills.filter(skill => skill.type === 'soft')
Then, go to your template and loop on those in your template.

Is there a edge weighted spring embedded layout in cytoscape.js?

We have a requirement to show nodes and edges graph in our Angular application and we chose to do it in cytoscape over high charts/amCharts/D3. Cytoscape is faster in loading and is the only library to handle 1000s of nodes that we have. Others break or lags.
We downloaded cytoscape app and were able to see a layout 'Edge weighted spring embedded'. It shows our interconnected nodes in a overall globe-like layout.
Now I want the same in cytoscape js and looks like we only have handful of layouts in https://js.cytoscape.org/
Does this layout possible in cytoscape js? How to achieve this? (Currently using fcose layout but we really like the globe look that 'Edge weighted spring embedded layout brings.
EDIT:
Here is another example: I want to achieve this layout in cytoscape.js.
What layout I should follow? Or is this something not available in js and only available in desktop App
There are three options I think:
The Compound Spring Embedder layout cose
The Compound Spring Embedder layout by Bilkent (for an enhanced compound node placement) cose-bilkent
The Constraint-Based Layout cola.js
They all use some sort of force directed layout, I think you should give them a try and use the one most fitting to your needs. There are many parameters you can set for each layout, so take a closer look at them too. For example, if you set infinite to true in the cola.js layout, you will see that you can move the nodes around and see the layout force them back to or to a fitting position:
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() {
var cy = (window.cy = cytoscape({
container: document.getElementById("cy"),
autounselectify: true,
boxSelectionEnabled: false,
layout: {
name: "cola",
infinite: true,
fit: false
},
style: [{
selector: "node",
css: {
"background-color": "#f92411"
}
},
{
selector: "edge",
css: {
"line-color": "#f92411"
}
}
],
elements: {
nodes: [{
data: {
id: "1",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "2",
label: "sucrose phosphate phosphatase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "4",
label: "sucrose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "6",
label: "sucrose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "8",
label: "invertase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "10",
label: "fructose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "12",
label: "fructokinase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "14",
label: "fructose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "20",
label: "phosphoglucose isomerase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "22",
label: "glucose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "28",
label: "glucose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "30",
label: "hexokinase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "33",
label: "sucrose synthase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "36",
label: "UDP - glucose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "38",
label: "sucrose phosphate synthase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "41",
label: "UDP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "44",
label: "fructose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "46",
label: "ATP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "47",
label: "ATP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "52",
label: "ATP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "57",
label: "ADP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "66",
label: "PP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "71",
label: "UTP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "76",
label: "UDP glucose pyrophosphorylase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "80",
label: "glucose 1-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "86",
label: "phospho- glucomutase (cPGM)"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "89",
label: "G1P transporter"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "90",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "95",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "102",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "103",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "104",
label: "G6P transporter"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "109",
label: "glucose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "115",
label: "phospho- glucomutase (cPGM)"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "121",
label: "glucose 1-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "128",
label: "ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase (pAGPase)"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "130",
label: "ADP - glucose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "136",
label: "PP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "141",
label: "ATP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "148",
label: "inorganic diphosphatase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "149",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "156",
label: "phosphate transporter"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "158",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "164",
label: "starch synthase (simpl.)"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "166",
label: "ADP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "172",
label: "starch"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "178",
label: "ATP/ADP transporter"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "179",
label: "ADP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "184",
label: "ADP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "189",
label: "ATP"
}
}
],
edges: [{
data: {
source: "2",
target: "1"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "4",
target: "2"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "2",
target: "6"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "6",
target: "8"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "8",
target: "10"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "12",
target: "14"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "14",
target: "20"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "20",
target: "22"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "8",
target: "28"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "28",
target: "30"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "30",
target: "22"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "6",
target: "33"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "33",
target: "10"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "33",
target: "36"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "36",
target: "38"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "38",
target: "4"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "38",
target: "41"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "41",
target: "33"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "44",
target: "38"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "52",
target: "12"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "12",
target: "57"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "46",
target: "30"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "30",
target: "47"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "71",
target: "76"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "76",
target: "66"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "76",
target: "36"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "80",
target: "76"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "22",
target: "86"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "86",
target: "80"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "95",
target: "89"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "89",
target: "90"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "102",
target: "104"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "80",
target: "89"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "104",
target: "109"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "115",
target: "109"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "121",
target: "89"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "121",
target: "115"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "121",
target: "128"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "128",
target: "130"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "141",
target: "128"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "128",
target: "136"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "136",
target: "148"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "148",
target: "149"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "149",
target: "156"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "156",
target: "158"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "130",
target: "164"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "164",
target: "166"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "178",
target: "179"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "184",
target: "178"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "178",
target: "189"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "141",
target: "178"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "104",
target: "103"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "10",
target: "12"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "164",
target: "172"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "22",
target: "104"
}
}
]
}
}));
cy.unbind("tapend");
cy.bind("tapend", "node", function() {
cy.animate({
fit: {
eles: cy.elements(),
padding: 20
},
center: {
eles: cy.elements()
}
}, {
duration: 500
});
});
});
body {
font-family: helvetica;
font-size: 14px;
}
#cy {
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
position: absolute;
left: 0;
top: 0;
z-index: 999;
}
h1 {
opacity: 0.5;
font-size: 1em;
}
<!DOCTYPE>
<html>
<head>
<title>cytoscape-cola.js demo</title>
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, user-scalable=no, initial-scale=1, maximum-scale=1">
<script src="https://unpkg.com/cytoscape/dist/cytoscape.min.js"></script>
<!-- for testing with local version of cytoscape.js -->
<!--<script src="../cytoscape.js/build/cytoscape.js"></script>-->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/webcola/WebCola/cola.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/cytoscape-cola#2.3.0/cytoscape-cola.min.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<h1>cytoscape-cola demo</h1>
<div id="cy"></div>
</body>
</html>
You can try "Euler" layout, it might give the same expected layout that you wanted. It is euler.js. I am using this layout for my own data set and is giving similar layout that you have shown above.

Elastic (animated) edges in graph with nodes exerting gravitational pull on neighbours?

Is there a layout extension for Cytoscape that enables a dynamic behavior similar to that of the Neo4j Browser, i.e. when you drag a node, its edges are elastic to some extend, but that also drag connected nodes along part of the way (I'd call it localized gravity)?
Update:
The example I'm working on uses the CoSE Bilkent (compound) layout extension, but it doesn't seem to support the effect/animation I'm after out of the box. I had hoped the scarcely documented { gravity: 1 } option might be related - after all, when a node pulls other nodes along, that could well be described as gravity - but changing the setting on a small sample graph had no such effect; some digging ensued and I now think that setting has to do with how close to the graph's center nodes are displayed. I then looked at all layout demos, none seem to display the effect I'm after out of the box. AllegroViva appears to implement similar behavior (video), but from my understanding, it's rendering a time series in that video (so might just be manually redrawing the graph). Their website seems to be disfunct, too.
What I'm looking for is something easy, ideally out of the box, or something that can be implemented quickly. Unfortunately, I'm not quite sure what the right search term would be for what I want (especially in Cytoscape's domain). Hence me asking what is admittedly a very high-level question. Today, I found out Visjs calls it physics events (or at least uses the effect I'm after as part of that demo) - but as I mentioned, gravity in Cytoscape is apparently not what I'm looking for. At this point, however, I'm merely trying to establish if Cytoscape is the right library, or whether I need to look at others, like Alchemy (cf. its Philosophers' Relatedness example).
Answer:
Thank you for editing the question, I think i can help you with this one. Cytoscape.js has this feature buried deep in the extension layouts, specifically in cytoscape.js-cola. The layout is a physics layout with "springy" like nodes, so that the distance between them stays the same. The catch here is, that in the paragraph Notes, the author describes this:
If you want to maintain interactivity, you probably should not mix infinite: true with fit: true. Fitting naturally changes the zoom level, making dragging misaligned and feel weird to users --- though it still works technically. Better to just fit: false when infinite: true, and cy.center() or cy.fit() on layoutready.
The alignment option isn't as flexible as the raw Cola option. Here, only integers can be used to specify relative positioning, so it's a bit limited. If you'd like to see a more sophisticated implementation, please send a pull request.
Code:
So this example should work (note that the nodes can be moved, but they tend to stay in formation because of their already optimal position):
document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() {
var cy = (window.cy = cytoscape({
container: document.getElementById("cy"),
autounselectify: true,
boxSelectionEnabled: false,
layout: {
name: "cola",
infinite: true,
fit: false
},
style: [{
selector: "node",
css: {
"background-color": "#f92411"
}
},
{
selector: "edge",
css: {
"line-color": "#f92411"
}
}
],
elements: {
nodes: [{
data: {
id: "1",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "2",
label: "sucrose phosphate phosphatase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "4",
label: "sucrose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "6",
label: "sucrose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "8",
label: "invertase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "10",
label: "fructose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "12",
label: "fructokinase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "14",
label: "fructose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "20",
label: "phosphoglucose isomerase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "22",
label: "glucose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "28",
label: "glucose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "30",
label: "hexokinase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "33",
label: "sucrose synthase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "36",
label: "UDP - glucose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "38",
label: "sucrose phosphate synthase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "41",
label: "UDP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "44",
label: "fructose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "46",
label: "ATP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "47",
label: "ATP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "52",
label: "ATP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "57",
label: "ADP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "66",
label: "PP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "71",
label: "UTP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "76",
label: "UDP glucose pyrophosphorylase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "80",
label: "glucose 1-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "86",
label: "phospho- glucomutase (cPGM)"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "89",
label: "G1P transporter"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "90",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "95",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "102",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "103",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "104",
label: "G6P transporter"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "109",
label: "glucose 6-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "115",
label: "phospho- glucomutase (cPGM)"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "121",
label: "glucose 1-phosphate"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "128",
label: "ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase (pAGPase)"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "130",
label: "ADP - glucose"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "136",
label: "PP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "141",
label: "ATP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "148",
label: "inorganic diphosphatase"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "149",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "156",
label: "phosphate transporter"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "158",
label: "P"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "164",
label: "starch synthase (simpl.)"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "166",
label: "ADP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "172",
label: "starch"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "178",
label: "ATP/ADP transporter"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "179",
label: "ADP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "184",
label: "ADP"
}
},
{
data: {
id: "189",
label: "ATP"
}
}
],
edges: [{
data: {
source: "2",
target: "1"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "4",
target: "2"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "2",
target: "6"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "6",
target: "8"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "8",
target: "10"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "12",
target: "14"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "14",
target: "20"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "20",
target: "22"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "8",
target: "28"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "28",
target: "30"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "30",
target: "22"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "6",
target: "33"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "33",
target: "10"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "33",
target: "36"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "36",
target: "38"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "38",
target: "4"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "38",
target: "41"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "41",
target: "33"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "44",
target: "38"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "52",
target: "12"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "12",
target: "57"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "46",
target: "30"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "30",
target: "47"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "71",
target: "76"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "76",
target: "66"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "76",
target: "36"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "80",
target: "76"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "22",
target: "86"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "86",
target: "80"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "95",
target: "89"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "89",
target: "90"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "102",
target: "104"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "80",
target: "89"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "104",
target: "109"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "115",
target: "109"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "121",
target: "89"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "121",
target: "115"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "121",
target: "128"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "128",
target: "130"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "141",
target: "128"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "128",
target: "136"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "136",
target: "148"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "148",
target: "149"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "149",
target: "156"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "156",
target: "158"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "130",
target: "164"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "164",
target: "166"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "178",
target: "179"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "184",
target: "178"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "178",
target: "189"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "141",
target: "178"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "104",
target: "103"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "10",
target: "12"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "164",
target: "172"
}
},
{
data: {
source: "22",
target: "104"
}
}
]
}
}));
cy.unbind("tapend");
cy.bind("tapend", "node", function() {
cy.animate({
fit: {
eles: cy.elements(),
padding: 20
},
center: {
eles: cy.elements()
}
}, {
duration: 500
});
});
});
body {
font-family: helvetica;
font-size: 14px;
}
#cy {
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
position: absolute;
left: 0;
top: 0;
z-index: 999;
}
h1 {
opacity: 0.5;
font-size: 1em;
}
<!DOCTYPE>
<html>
<head>
<title>cytoscape-cola.js demo</title>
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, user-scalable=no, initial-scale=1, maximum-scale=1">
<script src="https://unpkg.com/cytoscape/dist/cytoscape.min.js"></script>
<!-- for testing with local version of cytoscape.js -->
<!--<script src="../cytoscape.js/build/cytoscape.js"></script>-->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/webcola/WebCola/cola.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/cytoscape-cola#2.3.0/cytoscape-cola.min.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<h1>cytoscape-cola demo</h1>
<div id="cy"></div>
</body>
</html>
Conclusion:
Cytoscape.js has the ability to display the force layout, but it is a little worse than the two examples you provided (they can display the graph without moving the nodes to their optimal position but the user preferred one). If you like to use cytoscape.js, you can do that just fine, but always consider which use cases you need and check, if any other application can handle the situation better (cytoscape.js has so many awesome features you can use, so if you can make it work, cytoscape would be my way to go).
Best of luck!
You can use force-directed layout of d3.js Here is an example graph.
I believe Neo4j Browser also uses d3.js
From the official website:
The default Neo4j Server has a powerful, customizable data visualization tool based on the built-in D3.js library.
I found a video that may be similar as your questionUse of Cytoscape.js for Client project, also there is another extension LAYOUT with d3.js cytoscape.js-d3-forcethat may be a good reference.

extjs 4 - Unable to expand a dynamically generated tree

I have a requirement to create a tree grid which has unknown number of columns and data which gets rendered on click on a button. I have following code for the same.
//Model
Ext.define('SM.model.DynamicTreeModel', {
extend: 'Ext.data.Model'
});
//Store
Ext.define('SM.store.DynamicTreeStore',{
extend:'Ext.data.TreeStore',
model:'SM.DynamicTreeModel',
root: {
expanded: true
},
proxy: {
type: 'ajax',
url: 'TGData1.json',
reader: {
type: 'json',
root: 'children'
}
},
autoLoad: true
});
Ext.define('SM.view.compareScenario.DynamicTree', {
extend: 'Ext.tree.Panel',
alias: 'widget.DynamicTree',
frame: true,
columnLines: true,
autoLoad: false,
initComponent: function(){
var config = {
columns: [],
rowNumberer: false
};
Ext.apply(this, config);
Ext.apply(this.initialConfig, config);
this.callParent(arguments);
},
storeLoad: function(){
var columns = [];
Ext.each(this.store.proxy.reader.jsonData.columns, function(column){
columns.push(column);
});
this.reconfigure(this.store, columns);
this.store.getRootNode(this.store.getRootNode);
},
onRender: function(ct, position){
SM.view.compareScenario.DynamicTree.superclass.onRender.call(this, ct, position);
this.store.load({
scope: this,
callback: function(records, operation, success) {
this.storeLoad();
}
});
}
});
var influencesTree = {
xtype: 'DynamicTree',
id: 'influencesTree',
pading: '5',
region: 'south',
height: '70%',
collapsible: true,
rootVisible: false,
store: 'DynamicTreeStore'
};
The json file is as follows:
{
"metaData": {
"fields": [
{"name":"0", "type":"string"},
{"name":"1", "type":"string"},
{"name":"2", "type":"string"}
]
},
"columns" : [
{
"xtype":"treecolumn", //this is so we know which column will show the tree
"text":"Override Type",
"flex":"2",
"sortable":"true",
"dataIndex":"0"
},
{
"text":"Scenario 1",
"dataIndex":"1"
},
{
"text":"Copied Scenario",
"dataIndex":"2"
}
]
,
"text": ".",
"children": [{
"0":"CFO",
"1":"15",
"2":"16",
"children":[{
"0":"AW",
"1": "5",
"2": "5",
"leaf": "true",
},
{
"0":"AV",
"1":"10",
"2":"11",
"leaf": "true",
}
]
}
]
}
The tree renders, but the child nodes cannot be expanded as the + icon is not shown. Instead of + icon, a checkbox is rendered.
Any help/suggestions for the same will be highly appreciated.
Thanks,
Shalini
Ext.require([
'Ext.grid.*',
'Ext.data.*',
'Ext.dd.*']);
Ext.onReady(function () {
var myData = [{
name: "Rec 0",
type: "0"
}, {
name: "Rec 1",
type: "1"
}, {
name: "Rec 2",
type: "2"
}, {
name: "Rec 3",
type: "3"
}, {
name: "Rec 4",
type: "4"
}, {
name: "Rec 5",
type: "5"
}, {
name: "Rec 6",
type: "6"
}, {
name: "Rec 7",
type: "7"
}, {
name: "Rec 8",
type: "8"
}, {
name: "Rec 9",
type: "9"
}];
// create the data store
var firstGridStore = Ext.create('Ext.data.Store', {
model: 'Apps.demo.model.Resource',
autoLoad: true,
proxy: {
type: 'ajax',
url: '/echo/json/',
actionMethods: {
read: 'POST'
},
extraParams: {
json: Ext.JSON.encode(myData)
},
delay: 0
}
});
// Column Model shortcut array
var columns = [{
text: "Name",
flex: 1,
sortable: true,
dataIndex: 'name'
}, {
text: "Type",
width: 70,
sortable: true,
dataIndex: 'type'
}];
// declare the source Grid
var firstGrid = Ext.create('Ext.grid.Panel', {
viewConfig: {
plugins: {
ptype: 'gridviewdragdrop',
ddGroup: 'selDD'
},
listeners: {
drop: function (node, data, dropRec, dropPosition) {
}
}
},
store: firstGridStore,
columns: columns,
stripeRows: true,
title: 'First Grid',
margins: '0 2 0 0'
});
// create the destination Grid
var secondTree = Ext.create('Apps.demo.view.TreeGrid', {
viewConfig: {
plugins: {
ptype: 'treeviewdragdrop',
ddGroup: 'selDD'
},
listeners: {
beforedrop: function (node, data) {
data.records[0].set('leaf', false);
data.records[0].set('checked', null);
},
drop: function (node, data, dropRec, dropPosition) {
firstGrid.store.remove(data.records[0]);
}
}
}
});
var displayPanel = Ext.create('Ext.Panel', {
width: 650,
height: 300,
layout: {
type: 'hbox',
align: 'stretch',
padding: 5
},
renderTo: 'panel',
defaults: {
flex: 1
}, //auto stretch
items: [
firstGrid,
secondTree],
dockedItems: {
xtype: 'toolbar',
dock: 'bottom',
items: ['->', // Fill
{
text: 'Reset both components',
handler: function () {
firstGridStore.loadData(myData);
secondTreeStore.removeAll();
}
}]
}
});
});
var response = Ext.JSON.encode({
"children": [{
"itemId": 171,
"type": "comedy",
"name": "All the way",
"children": [{
"leaf": true,
"itemId": 171,
"type": "actor",
"name": "Rowan Atkinson"
}],
}, {
"itemId": 11,
"type": "fantasy",
"name": "I love You",
"children": [{
"itemId": 11,
"leaf": true,
"type": "actor",
"name": "Rajan",
}]
}, {
"itemId": 173,
"type": "Action",
"name": "Fast and Furious",
"children": [{
"itemId": 174,
"type": "actor",
"name": "Dwayne Johnson",
"children": [{
"leaf": true,
"itemId": 175,
"type": "wrestler",
"name": "The Rock"
}]
}]
}]
});
Ext.define('Apps.demo.model.Resource', {
extend: 'Ext.data.Model',
fields: [{
name: "name",
type: "string"
}, {
name: "type",
type: "string"
}]
});
Ext.define('Apps.demo.view.TreeGrid', {
extend: 'Ext.tree.Panel',
title: 'Demo',
height: 300,
rootVisible: true,
singleExpand: true,
initComponent: function () {
Ext.apply(this, {
store: new Ext.data.TreeStore({
model: 'Apps.demo.model.Resource',
"root": {
"name": "",
"type": "",
"expanded": "true"
},
proxy: {
type: 'ajax',
url: '/echo/json/',
actionMethods: {
read: 'POST'
},
extraParams: {
json: response
},
delay: 0
}
}),
listeners: {
'beforeiteminsert' : function(obj, node) {
console.log(node);
}
},
columns: [{
xtype: 'treecolumn',
text: 'Name',
dataIndex: 'name',
width: 200
}, {
text: 'Type',
dataIndex: 'type'
}]
});
this.callParent();
}
});
var grid = Ext.create('Apps.demo.view.TreeGrid');
Please check this code .It might not give u the proper answer but will surely give u the hint how to achieve the output.

using Select2 with Durandal

Hi I am trying to use Select2 (multiselect) with Durandal (http://jsfiddle.net/anasnakawa/6XvqX/381/),
but the popup does not work below is part of my VM and HTML, here I am trying to bind a list of states to an input it should work as an auto complete but there seems to a issue showing the selection popup, can someone please help
define(['durandal/app', 'services/datacontext', 'plugins/router', 'services/bindinghandlers'],
function (app, datacontext, router) {
var withs = ko.observableArray(),
states = [
{ id: "AL", text: "Alabama" },
{ id: "AK", text: "Alaska" },
{ id: "AZ", text: "Arizona" },
{ id: "AR", text: "Arkansas" },
{ id: "CA", text: "California" },
{ id: "CO", text: "Colorado" },
{ id: "CT", text: "Connecticut" },
{ id: "DE", text: "Delaware" },
{ id: "FL", text: "Florida" },
{ id: "GA", text: "Georgia" },
{ id: "HI", text: "Hawaii" },
{ id: "ID", text: "Idaho" },
{ id: "IL", text: "Illinois" },
{ id: "IN", text: "Indiana" },
{ id: "IA", text: "Iowa" },
{ id: "KS", text: "Kansas" },
{ id: "KY", text: "Kentucky" },
{ id: "LA", text: "Louisiana" },
{ id: "ME", text: "Maine" },
{ id: "MD", text: "Maryland" },
{ id: "MA", text: "Massachusetts" },
{ id: "MI", text: "Michigan" },
{ id: "MN", text: "Minnesota" },
{ id: "MS", text: "Mississippi" },
{ id: "MO", text: "Missouri" },
{ id: "MT", text: "Montana" },
{ id: "NE", text: "Nebraska" },
{ id: "NV", text: "Nevada" },
{ id: "NH", text: "New Hampshire" },
{ id: "NJ", text: "New Jersey" },
{ id: "NM", text: "New Mexico" },
{ id: "NY", text: "New York" },
{ id: "NC", text: "North Carolina" },
{ id: "ND", text: "North Dakota" },
{ id: "OH", text: "Ohio" },
{ id: "OK", text: "Oklahoma" },
{ id: "OR", text: "Oregon" },
{ id: "PA", text: "Pennsylvania" },
{ id: "RI", text: "Rhode Island" },
{ id: "SC", text: "South Carolina" },
{ id: "SD", text: "South Dakota" },
{ id: "TN", text: "Tennessee" },
{ id: "TX", text: "Texas" },
{ id: "UT", text: "Utah" },
{ id: "VT", text: "Vermont" },
{ id: "VA", text: "Virginia" },
{ id: "WA", text: "Washington" },
{ id: "WV", text: "West Virginia" },
{ id: "WI", text: "Wisconsin" },
{ id: "WY", text: "Wyoming" }
];
var vm = {
withs: withs,
states: states,
};
return vm;
});
<select multiple="true" data-bind="options: states, optionsValue: 'id', optionsText: 'text', selectedOptions: withs, select2: {}" style="width: 300px"></select>
Register select2 in the Require.js configuration inside main.js:
requirejs.config({
paths: {
'select2': 'path/to/select2'
}
});
Define it in your view model:
define(['select2'], function (select2) {
// ...
});
Don't forget to declare it. You'll have to use the attached callback:
var vm = {
withs: withs,
states: states,
attached: function() {
$('select').select2();
}
};