graphy-ng
is a library for rendering directed graphs in Angular. Under the hood, Dagre is used as a layout engine and the graph is drawn using SVGs.
The library is compiled with Ivy and requires Angular 12+
A simple interactive demo can be found on StackBlitz. It showcases how nodes and edges can be added dynamically and some features like making use of custom templates, re-rendering on create/update, and navigating the graph through panning or zooming.
Using npm:
$ npm i graphy-ng && npm i -D @types/d3-shape
Using yarn:
$ yarn add graphy-ng && yarn add -D @types/d3-shape
Import GraphyModule
into your feature module.
family-tree.module.ts
@NgModule({
imports: [GraphyModule],
...
})
export class FamilyTreeModule {}
Consume graphy-ng
in your component, providing templates for how nodes and edges should be rendered.
family-tree.component.html
<p>Here's my pretty graph:</p>
<graphy-ng>
<ng-container *defsTemplate>
<svg:marker
id="arrow"
viewBox="0 -5 10 10"
refX="8"
refY="0"
markerWidth="4"
markerHeight="4"
orient="auto"
>
<svg:path d="M0,-5L10,0L0,5" />
</svg:marker>
</ng-container>
<ng-container *nodeTemplate="let node; nodes: nodes">
<svg:circle cx="25" cy="25" r="25" />
<svg:text fill="blue" transform="translate(0 30)">{{ node.data.name }}</svg:text>
</ng-container>
<ng-container *edgeTemplate="let edge; edges: edges">
<svg:path marker-end="url(#arrow)" [attr.d]="edge.pathDefinition"></svg:path>
</ng-container>
</graphy-ng>
family-tree.component.ts
@Component({
...
})
export class FamilyTreeComponent {
nodes: InputNode<{ name: string }>[] = [
{ id: '1', data: { name: 'Carl' } },
{ id: '2', data: { name: 'Robin' } },
{ id: '3', data: { name: 'Jeremy' } },
];
edges: InputEdge[] = [
{ sourceId: '1', targetId: '3', },
{ sourceId: '2', targetId: '3', },
];
}
Comparison vs. ngx-graph
Pros:
- Significantly more lightweight. Production bundle size of a fresh Angular app decreased from
490kb
to255kb
by switching libraries (47% overall decrease in app size). - Input nodes and edges are not modified by the library.
- Avoids requiring certain CSS classes to be hard-coded when using custom templates.
- Full TypeScript support when using custom templates.
Cons:
- Lacks more advanced and niche features — namely clusters, custom/force-directed layouts, and graph minimaps.
graphy-ng
is licensed under the terms of the MIT License.