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Getting a modified preorder tree traversal model (nested set) into a <ul>

I am trying to get my data which is hierarchically set up with a tree traversal model into an < ul> in order to show on my site.

Here is my code:

function getCats($) {
  // retrieve all children of $parent
  $query = "SELECT max(rght) as max from t_categories";
  $row = C_DB::fetchSingleRow($query);
  $max = $row["max"];
  $result ="<ul>";
  $query = "SELECT * from t_categories where lft >=0 and rght <= $max";
  if($rs = C_DB::fetchRecordset($query)){
    $p_right ="";
    $p_left ="";
    $p_diff="";          
    while($row = C_DB::fetchRow($rs)){
      $diff = $row["rght"] -$row["lft"];

      if($diff == $p_diff){
        $result.= "<li>".$row['title']."</li>";
      }elseif (($row["rght"] - $row["lft"] > 1) && ($row["rght"] > $p_right)){
        $result. "<ul>";
        $result.= "<li>".$row['title']."</li>";

      }else{
        $result.= "<li>".$row['title']."</li>";
      } 

      $p_right = $row["rght"];
      $p_left = $row["lft"];
      $p_diff = $diff;
    }
  }
  $result.= "</ul>";
  return $result;
} 

Here is my sample table:

|ID  |  TITLE | lft| rght |
|1   | Cat 1  | 1      |    16       |
|18  | Cat 2  | 3      |    4       |
|22  | Cat 3  | 5      |    6       |
|28  | Cat 4  | 7      |    8       |
|34  | Cat 5  | 9      |    9       |
|46  | Cat 6  | 11      |    10       |
|47  | Cat 7  | 13      |    12       |
|49  | Cat 8  | 15      |    14       | 

Now it outputs something like:

    <ul>
<li>Cat 1</li>
<li>Cat 2</li>
<li>Cat 3</li>
<li>Cat 4</li>
<li>Cat 5</li>
<li>Cat 6</li>
<li>Cat 7</li>
<li>Cat 8</li>
</ul>

Can anyone tell me why or how it will output the list in hierarchical a structure?

Related topic

like image 226
sanders Avatar asked Aug 21 '09 08:08

sanders


3 Answers

Ok, let's do some bounty hunting ;)

Step 0 - Sanitize example:
As already mentioned, your example data is broken, as it does not define a valid nested set. If you took this data from an app, you should check the insert/delete logic.

So for testing, I used a sanitized version like so:
(MySQL here, as it was the first at hand)

CREATE TABLE t_categories`(
  `id` INTEGER UNSIGNED NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
  `title` VARCHAR(45) NOT NULL,
  `lft` INTEGER UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
  `rght` INTEGER UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
);

INSERT INTO t_categories (title, lft, rght) VALUES ('Cat 1',1,16);
INSERT INTO t_categories (title, lft, rght) VALUES ('Cat 2',2,3);
INSERT INTO t_categories (title, lft, rght) VALUES ('Cat 3',4,7);
INSERT INTO t_categories (title, lft, rght) VALUES ('Cat 4',5,6);
INSERT INTO t_categories (title, lft, rght) VALUES ('Cat 5',8,13);
INSERT INTO t_categories (title, lft, rght) VALUES ('Cat 6',9,12);
INSERT INTO t_categories (title, lft, rght) VALUES ('Cat 7',10,11);
INSERT INTO t_categories (title, lft, rght) VALUES ('Cat 8',14,15);

Step 1 - Let the database do the ordering
Nested sets where primarily invented as a convenient way of storing trees in databases, as they make it pretty easy to query for subtrees, parent relations and, especially interesting in this case, for order and depth:

SELECT node.title, (COUNT(parent.title) - 1) AS depth
 FROM t_categories AS node
 CROSS JOIN t_categories AS parent
 WHERE node.lft BETWEEN parent.lft AND parent.rght
 GROUP BY node.title
 ORDER BY node.lft

This will return your set neatly ordered, starting with the root node and continuing to the end in preorder. Most importantly, it will add the depth of each node as a positive integer, indicating how many levels the node is below root (level 0). For the above example data, the result will be:

title, depth
'Cat 1', 0
'Cat 2', 1
'Cat 3', 1
'Cat 4', 2
'Cat 5', 1
'Cat 6', 2
'Cat 7', 3
'Cat 8', 1

In code:

// Grab ordered data
$query = '';
$query .= 'SELECT node.title, (COUNT(parent.title) - 1) AS depth';
$query .= ' FROM t_categories AS node';
$query .= ' CROSS JOIN t_categories AS parent';
$query .= ' WHERE node.lft BETWEEN parent.lft AND parent.rght';
$query .= ' GROUP BY node.title';
$query .= ' ORDER BY node.lft';

$result = mysql_query($query);

// Build array
$tree = array();
while ($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) {
  $tree[] = $row;
}

The resulting array will look like this:

Array
(
    [0] => Array
        (
            [title] => Cat 1
            [depth] => 0
        )

    [1] => Array
        (
            [title] => Cat 2
            [depth] => 1
        )
    ...
)

Step 2 - Output as HTML list fragment:

Using while loop:

// bootstrap loop
$result = '';
$currDepth = -1;  // -1 to get the outer <ul>
while (!empty($tree)) {
  $currNode = array_shift($tree);
  // Level down?
  if ($currNode['depth'] > $currDepth) {
    // Yes, open <ul>
    $result .= '<ul>';
  }
  // Level up?
  if ($currNode['depth'] < $currDepth) {
    // Yes, close n open <ul>
    $result .= str_repeat('</ul>', $currDepth - $currNode['depth']);
  }
  // Always add node
  $result .= '<li>' . $currNode['title'] . '</li>';
  // Adjust current depth
  $currDepth = $currNode['depth'];
  // Are we finished?
  if (empty($tree)) {
    // Yes, close n open <ul>
    $result .= str_repeat('</ul>', $currDepth + 1);
  }
}

print $result;

Same logic as recursive function:

function renderTree($tree, $currDepth = -1) {
  $currNode = array_shift($tree);
  $result = '';
  // Going down?
  if ($currNode['depth'] > $currDepth) {
    // Yes, prepend <ul>
    $result .= '<ul>';
  }
  // Going up?
  if ($currNode['depth'] < $currDepth) {
    // Yes, close n open <ul>
    $result .= str_repeat('</ul>', $currDepth - $currNode['depth']);
  }
  // Always add the node
  $result .= '<li>' . $currNode['title'] . '</li>';
  // Anything left?
  if (!empty($tree)) {
    // Yes, recurse
    $result .=  renderTree($tree, $currNode['depth']);
  }
  else {
    // No, close remaining <ul>
    $result .= str_repeat('</ul>', $currNode['depth'] + 1);
  }
  return $result;
}

print renderTree($tree);

Both will output the following structure:

<ul>
    <li>Cat 1</li>
    <li>
        <ul>
            <li>Cat 2</li>
            <li>Cat 3</li>
            <li>
                <ul>
                    <li>Cat 4</li>
                </ul>
            </li>
            <li>Cat 5</li>
            <li>
                <ul>
                    <li>Cat 6</li>
                    <li>
                        <ul>
                            <li>Cat 7</li>
                        </ul>
                    </li>
                </ul>
            </li>
            <li>Cat 8</li>
        </ul>
    </li>
</ul>

Nitpickers corner: Questioner explicitly asked for <ul>, but ordered unordered lists!? Come on...
;-)

like image 135
Henrik Opel Avatar answered Nov 12 '22 15:11

Henrik Opel


Better Render Tree Function that worked for me (php function to prepare html source for use in jsTree jQuery plugin) instead of the Henrik Opel's one:

function MyRenderTree ( $tree = array(array('name'=>'','depth'=>'')) ){

$current_depth = 0;
$counter = 0;

$result = '<ul>';

foreach($tree as $node){
    $node_depth = $node['depth'];
    $node_name = $node['name'];
    $node_id = $node['category_id'];

    if($node_depth == $current_depth){
        if($counter > 0) $result .= '</li>';            
    }
    elseif($node_depth > $current_depth){
        $result .= '<ul>';
        $current_depth = $current_depth + ($node_depth - $current_depth);
    }
    elseif($node_depth < $current_depth){
        $result .= str_repeat('</li></ul>',$current_depth - $node_depth).'</li>';
        $current_depth = $current_depth - ($current_depth - $node_depth);
    }
    $result .= '<li id="c'.$node_id.'"';
    $result .= $node_depth < 2 ?' class="open"':'';
    $result .= '><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>'.$node_name.'</a>';
    ++$counter;
}
 $result .= str_repeat('</li></ul>',$node_depth).'</li>';

$result .= '</ul>';

return $result;}

Result HTML:

<ul>
    <li id="c1" class="open"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>ELECTRONICS</a>
        <ul>
            <li id="c2" class="open"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>TELEVISIONS</a>
                <ul>
                    <li id="c3"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>TUBE</a></li>
                    <li id="c4"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>LCD</a></li>
                    <li id="c5"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>PLASMA</a>
                        <ul>
                            <li id="c14"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>PLASMA1</a></li>
                            <li id="c15"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>PLASMA2</a></li>
                        </ul>
                    </li>
                </ul>
            </li>
            <li id="c6" class="open"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>PORTABLE ELECTRONICS</a>
                <ul>
                    <li id="c7"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>MP3 PLAYERS</a>
                        <ul>
                            <li id="c8"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>FLASH</a></li>
                        </ul>
                    </li>
                    <li id="c9"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>CD PLAYERS</a></li>
                    <li id="c10"><a href="#"><ins>&nbsp;</ins>2 WAY RADIOS</a></li>
                </ul>
            </li>
        </ul>
    </li>
</ul>
like image 30
admit Avatar answered Nov 12 '22 16:11

admit


There's a PEAR package for dealing with nested sets: DB_NestedSet.
You might also be interested in the article Managing Hierarchical Data in MySQL.

like image 4
VolkerK Avatar answered Nov 12 '22 14:11

VolkerK