Uncompromisingly Flexible Phylogenetic Trees in Javascript, powered by d3
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TidyTree is both a full-featured web application for users, along with the underlying library for developers.
It's designed to replicate much of the functionality of FigTree, though it's by no means a perfect replacement. It does, however, run entirely in-browser.
First import the library:
<script src="https://d3js.org/d3.v5.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://unpkg.com/[email protected]/dist/tidytree.min.js"></script>
(It requires d3!)
Then stick this in an HTML script
tag:
let newick = "(A:0.1,B:0.2,(C:0.3,D:0.4):0.5);";
let tree = new TidyTree(newick, { parent: "body" });
And Voila! Your body
will be populated by a phylogenetic tree.
tidytree is based on this gist (See in action), which "mostly just duplicates the cannonical[sic] d3.tree and d3.cluster bl.ocks by Mike Bostock."
MicrobeTrace needed a Phylogenetic Tree renderer that enabled rerooting and distance scaling. Additionally, there were a bunch of nice-to-haves, like Unrooted and Circular views, Zooming, Colorable and Selectable nodes... You get the idea.
As for the viewer, well, we needed a platform to rapidly prototype features for the library. The product of that is a single-page web application that leverages literally all of the features of the library. If you're a dork like me, you can see this in the coding of the index.html file. Notice how all of the select widgets are programmatically populated--that's so we could implement new features (e.g. layouts) without having to update the Demo HTML. After that, all we had to do was keep the UI clean.
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The repository utilizes code licensed under the terms of the Apache Software License and therefore is licensed under ASL v2 or later.
This source code in this repository is free: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Apache Software License version 2, or (at your option) any later version.
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The source code forked from other open source projects will inherit its license.
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In order to test your changes locally before submitting a pull request, make your changes to src/main.js
and app/index.html
. Then,
use rollup -c
from the root of the project directory. You can then open app/index.html
in your browser to test your changes.
This repository is not a source of government records, but is a copy to increase collaboration and collaborative potential. All government records will be published through the CDC web site.
Please refer to CDC's Template Repository for more information about contributing to this repository, public domain notices and disclaimers, and code of conduct.