Manipulate and traverse tree-like structures in TypeScript.
Inspiration from tree-model.js.
Tree is available as an npm module so you can install it with npm install ts-tree-structure
and use it in your script:
import Tree from 'ts-tree-structure';
const tree = new Tree();
const root = tree.parse({ id: 1, name: 'foo', children: [{ id: 11, name: 'bar' }]});
const Tree = require('ts-tree-structure').default;
const tree = new Tree();
const root = tree.parse({ id: 1, name: 'foo', children: [{ id: 11, name: 'bar' }]});
<script src="https://unpkg.com/ts-tree-structure/umd/ts-tree-structure.min.js"></script>
<script>
var Tree = Tree.default;
var tree = new Tree();
var root = tree.parse({ id: 1, name: 'foo', children: [{ id: 11, name: 'bar' }]});
</script>
Type definitions are already bundled with the package, which should just work with npm install.
You can maually find the definition files in the src
folder.
Create a new Tree with the given options.
const tree = new Tree()
Parse the given user defined model and return the root Node object.
tree.parse(model): Node
Return true
if this Node is the root, false
otherwise.
node.isRoot(): boolean
Return true
if this Node has one or more children, false
otherwise.
node.hasChildren(): boolean
Add the given node as child of this one. Return the child Node.
parentNode.addChild(childNode): Node
Add the given node as child of this one at the given index. Return the child Node.
parentNode.addChildAtIndex(childNode, index): Node
Sets the index of the node among its siblings to the given value. Return the node itself.
node.setIndex(index): Node
Gets the index of the node relative to its siblings. Return the index value.
node.getIndex(): number
Get the array of Nodes representing the path from the root to this Node (inclusive).
node.getPath(): Node[]
Drop the subtree starting at this node. Returns the node itself, which is now a root node.
node.drop(): Node
Warning - Dropping a node while walking the tree is not supported. You must first collect the nodes to drop using one of the traversal functions and then drop them. Example:
root.all( /* predicate */ ).forEach((node) => {
node.drop();
});
Starting from this node, find the first Node that matches the predicate and return it. The predicate is a function wich receives the visited Node and returns true
if the Node should be picked and false
otherwise.
node.first(predicate): Node
Starting from this node, find all Nodes that match the predicate and return these.
node.all(predicate): Node[]
Starting from this node, traverse the subtree calling the action for each visited node. The action is a function which receives the visited Node as argument. The traversal can be halted by returning false
from the action.
node.walk([options], action): void
Note - first
, all
and walk
can optionally receive as first argument an object with traversal options. Currently the only supported option is the traversal strategy
which can be any of the following:
{strategy: 'pre'}
- Depth-first pre-order [default];{strategy: 'post'}
- Depth-first post-order;{strategy: 'breadth'}
- Breadth-first.
These functions can also take, as the last parameter, the context on which the action will be called.
Fork this repository and run npm install
on the project root folder to make sure you have all project dependencies installed.
Run npm run lint
This will check both source and tests for code correctness and style compliance.
Run npm test