GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
GraphViz2::Data::Grapher(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation GraphViz2::Data::Grapher(3)

GraphViz2::Data::Grapher - Visualize a data structure as a graph

        #!/usr/bin/env perl

        use strict;
        use warnings;

        use File::Spec;

        use GraphViz2;
        use GraphViz2::Data::Grapher;

        my($sub) = sub{};
        my($s)   =
        {
                A =>
                {
                        a =>
                        {
                        },
                        bbbbbb => $sub,
                        c123   => $sub,
                        d      => \$sub,
                },
                C =>
                {
                        b =>
                        {
                                a =>
                                {
                                        a =>
                                        {
                                        },
                                        b => sub{},
                                        c => 42,
                                },
                        },
                },
                els => [qw(element_1 element_2 element_3)],
        };

        my($graph) = GraphViz2 -> new
                (
                 edge   => {color => 'grey'},
                 global => {directed => 1},
                 graph  => {rankdir => 'TB'},
                 node   => {color => 'blue', shape => 'oval'},
                );

        my($g)           = GraphViz2::Data::Grapher->new(graph => $graph);
        my($format)      = shift || 'svg';
        my($output_file) = shift || File::Spec -> catfile('html', "parse.data.$format");

        $g -> create(name => 's', thing => $s);
        $graph -> run(format => $format, output_file => $output_file);

        # If you did not provide a GraphViz2 object, do this
        # to get access to the auto-created GraphViz2 object.

        #$g -> create(name => 's', thing => $s);
        #$g -> graph -> run(format => $format, output_file => $output_file);

        # Or even

        #$g -> create(name => 's', thing => $s)
        #-> graph
        #-> run(format => $format, output_file => $output_file);

See scripts/parse.data.pl ("Scripts Shipped with this Module" in GraphViz2).

Takes a Perl data structure and recursively converts it into Tree::DAG_Node object, and then graphs it.

You can write the result in any format supported by Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/>.

Here is the list of output formats <http://www.graphviz.org/content/output-formats>.

Within the graph:

o Array names are preceeded by '@'
o Code references are preceeded by '&'
o Hash names are preceeded by '%'
o Scalar names are preceeded by '$'

Hence, a hash ref will look like '%$h'.

Further, objects of different type have different shapes.

"new()" is called as "my($obj) = GraphViz2::Data::Grapher -> new(k1 => v1, k2 => v2, ...)".

It returns a new object of type "GraphViz2::Data::Grapher".

Key-value pairs accepted in the parameter list:

o graph => $graphviz_object
This option specifies the GraphViz2 object to use. This allows you to configure it as desired.

The default is GraphViz2 -> new. The default attributes are the same as in the synopsis, above, except for the graph label of course.

This key is optional.

Creates the graph, which is accessible via the graph() method, or via the graph object you passed to new().

Returns $self to allow method chaining.

$name is the string which will be placed in the root node of the tree.

If $s = {...}, say, use 's', not '$s', because '%$' will be prefixed automatically to the name, because $s is a hashref.

$thing is the data stucture to graph.

Returns the graph object, either the one supplied to new() or the one created during the call to new().

Returns the tree object (of type Tree::DAG_Node) built before it is traversed to generate the nodes and edges.

Demonstrates graphing a Perl data structure.

Outputs to ./html/parse.data.svg by default.

Demonstrates using XML::Bare to parse HTML.

Inputs from ./t/sample.html, and outputs to ./html/parse.html.svg by default.

Demonstrates using XML::Bare to parse XML.

Inputs from ./t/sample.xml, and outputs to ./html/parse.xml.bare.svg by default.

Many thanks are due to the people who chose to make Graphviz <http://www.graphviz.org/> Open Source.

And thanks to Leon Brocard <http://search.cpan.org/~lbrocard/>, who wrote GraphViz, and kindly gave me co-maint of the module.

GraphViz2 was written by Ron Savage <ron@savage.net.au> in 2011.

Home page: <http://savage.net.au/index.html>.

Australian copyright (c) 2011, Ron Savage.

        All Programs of mine are 'OSI Certified Open Source Software';
        you can redistribute them and/or modify them under the terms of
        The Perl License, a copy of which is available at:
        http://dev.perl.org/licenses/
2020-10-18 perl v5.32.1

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 3 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.