Deprecated: Use elkjs
elkjs is now available and klayjs is deprecated. In other words, open bugs will be migrated to elkjs and hopefully fixed there. This repository will persist, however, no fixes or new builds are to be expected. Some words on ELK: The ELK project is the successor of the KIELER project, which formed the basis of klayjs. KIELER didn't die however, we only extracted the parts of the code related to automatic layout and put it into an official Eclipse project.
KLayJS is a layer-based layout algorithm that is particularly suited for node-link diagrams with an inherent direction and ports (explicit attachment points on a node's border). It is based on the ideas originally introduced by Sugiyama et al.
The algorithm is developed in Java and compiled to JavaScript using GWT. For further information see the KIELER Wiki pages.
In case you want to use the layout in conjunction with D3.js you can take a look at our KLayJS-D3 extension.
Either download the klay.js
file or install it using npm
or bower
.
npm install klayjs
bower install klayjs
The library can be used in the browser, in a WebWorker, and with server-side node.js.
We use the JSON KGraph format to specify a graph with its properties. A minimal example looks like this:
var graph = {
"id": "root",
"properties": {
"direction": "RIGHT", "spacing": 40
},
"children": [{"id": "n1", "width": 40, "height": 40},
{"id": "n2", "width": 40, "height": 40}],
"edges": [{"id": "e1", "source": "n1", "target": "n2"}]
};
Within the browser KLayJS is registered globally with the $klay
variable
and can be used as follows. Note the difference between local layout options
specified for specific elements in the graph and global layout options
that are applied to every graph element.
<script type="text/javascript" src="klayjs.js"></script>
<script>
$klay.layout({
graph: graph,
options: { spacing: 20 },
success: function(layouted) { console.log(layouted); },
error: function(error) { console.log(error); }
});
</script>
Depending on the graph size the layout process can take some time possibly freezing your browser (though it should be fast in most cases). Modern browsers support web workers, some kind of threads for the browser. The following code snippet demonstrates how to start and communicate with a web worker performing layout.
var worker = new Worker('klayjs.js');
// send layout request
worker.postMessage({
graph: [graph],
options: [options]
});
//
worker.addEventListener('message', function (e) {
var graph = e.data;
// [ applyLayout(graph) ]
}, false);
For rapid prototyping or headless diagram generation no browser is required and you might want to use node.js.
npm install klayjs
var klay = require('klayjs');
klay.layout({
graph: [graph],
options: [options],
success: function(g) { console.log(g); }
});
A broad variety of layout options is supported. The available options and their effects are discussed here
- Other than for the original java version of the layouter,
the
layoutHierarchy
option is by defaulttrue
. - If you intend to use the fixed layouter (
de.cau.cs.kieler.fixed
) at some point, you have to setlayoutHierarchy
tofalse
.
Some examples using the KLayJS-D3 extension are available at:
- Ports
- Hierarchy
- Interactive
- Miserables (Data From D3 Force Example)
See the examples
folder of the klayjs-d3 project.