I have an array of arrays which holds parent-child relationships between nodes in a graph. Each of the nested arrays is of the form
array( 0 => parent_node_id, 1 => child_node_id )
So in this array:
0 => array(
0 => 1
1 => 3
)
the two nodes are 1 and 3, and there is a parent-child relationship between node 1 and node 3 (the outer array index 0
is irrelevant).
1 => array(
0 => 3
1 => 5
),
represents a parent-child relationship between node 3 and node 5 (the 1
is irrelevant).
Here is the parent-child relationship array (note that the array index of the outer array (0, 1, 2, 3, etc.) does not represent anything):
0 => array(
0 => 1
1 => 3
),
1 => array(
0 => 3
1 => 5
),
2 => array(
0 => 3
1 => 7
),
3 => array(
0 => 3
1 => 9
),
4 => array(
0 => 1
1 => 10
),
5 => array(
0 => 10
1 => 15
)
Here is a pictorial representation of the data structure that it encodes:
And in code format (although any better ideas for an array structure that I can generate an HTML list from later would be appreciated!):
0 => array
0 => 1
1 => array
0 => 3
1 => array
0 => 5
2 => array
0 => 7
3 => array
0 => 9
2 => array
0 => 10
1 => array
0 => 15
Using the information from this array, I would like to generate a tree that I can then use to build a menu in an html page. How can I do this using just my array of parent-child relationships?
I know there are many similar algorithms available on stack overflow, but none that works with multiple roots or the particular array input structure that I am using.
The OP stated in a comment that this would be used to build a menu system, so I have written some code that converts the array of arrays into a more comprehensible data structure, builds a nested list (suitable for using as a menu), and populates the list items with data from a second array of $content
. For the real thing, the data in $content
can be a set of links or whatever is desired.
# input array
$array = array(
0 => array(
0 => 1,
1 => 3
),
1 => array(
0 => 3,
1 => 5
),
2 => array(
0 => 3,
1 => 7
),
3 => array(
0 => 3,
1 => 9
),
4 => array(
0 => 1,
1 => 10
),
5 => array(
0 => 10,
1 => 15
));
# associative array of node IDs and the node contents
# obviously for a menu, the node contents will probably be links
$content = array(
1 => 'ape',
3 => 'bear',
5 => 'cow',
7 => 'dog',
9 => 'elephant',
10 => 'frog',
15 => 'giraffe'
);
$tree = [];
# simplify the parent-child
foreach (array_values($array) as $a) {
$tree[ $a[0] ][ $a[1] ] = 'value';
}
$roots = get_root($array);
# start our initial list...
$str = '<ul>';
foreach (array_keys($roots) as $r) {
$str .= build_tree( $tree, $content, $r );
}
$str .= "</ul>";
echo $str;
/**
* build_tree($tree, $content, $n)
*
* builds an html representation of a tree using $tree, a data structure
* containing parent-child relationships, $content, the content of each
* node of the tree, and $n, the current node in the tree. Calls itself
* recursively when it encounters a subtree to be built
*
* @param array $tree
* @param array $content - assoc array of
* @param string $n - current node in the tree
* @return string $html representing the tree
*/
function build_tree($tree, $content, $n) {
$html = "<li>node id: $n; ".$content[$n]."</li>";
# does $n exist in $tree -- i.e. does it have a child?
if ( isset($tree[$n]) ) {
# if so, start a new nested list
$html .= '<li><ul>';
# for each of the children of $n, our parent node,
# run the build_tree code to create the html
foreach (array_keys($tree[$n]) as $node) {
$html .= build_tree($tree, $content, $node);
}
$html .= '</ul></li>';
}
return $html;
}
/**
* get_root ( $input )
*
* input array format:
* 0 => [ 0 => parent_node_id, 1 => child_node_id ],
* 1 => [ 0 => parent_node_id2, 1 => child_node_id2 ],;
*
* takes an associative array of parent-child relationships
* and makes two arrays, one containing all the parent nodes,
* and one containing the child nodes. The root nodes are
* those that appear in the parent node array but not the
* child node array.
*
* @param array $input
* @return array $r - assoc arr. with root nodes as keys
*/
function get_root ($input) {
$p = [];
$c = [];
$r = [];
foreach ($input as $k => $v) {
$p[ $v[0] ] = 1; # parent node
$c[ $v[1] ] = 1; # child node
}
# find the array items in $p that aren't in $c
foreach ($p as $k => $v) {
if (! isset($c[$k]) ) {
$r[$k] = 1;
}
}
return $r;
}
Results of the above code (test it using this online demo):
The raw HTML (run through HTML tidy):
<ul>
<li>Node ID: 1; content: ape</li>
<li>
<ul>
<li>Node ID: 3; content: bear</li>
<li>
<ul>
<li>Node ID: 5; content: cow</li>
<li>Node ID: 7; content: dog</li>
<li>Node ID: 9; content: elephant</li>
</ul>
</li>
<li>Node ID: 10; content: frog</li>
<li>
<ul>
<li>Node ID: 15; content: giraffe</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
</li>
</ul>
My contribution. There are only three kinds of elements in the array:
Based on those three rules, you can build a menu:
Loop all elements and store parents and children by number.
result: 3 parents: 1, 3 and 10.
6 children: 3, 5, 7, 9, 10 and 15.
Now we need to filter those results:
2a: A LONELY CHILD is an element in children and not in parents
result **real children**: 5, 7, 9, and 15 have no child of their own
2b: Get PARENT/CHILD combinations by substracting LONLY CHILDREN from all children
result **parent/child**: 3 and 10 have a parent and child(ren)
2c: Get the OVERALL PARENT by substracting PARENT/CHILD from PARENT
result: **real parent** is 1
Build a menu, starting with the real children, adding them to their rightfull parents and add those to the overall parent.
And in code...
$arr=array(array(1,3),array(3,5),array(3,7),array(3,9),array(1,10),array(10,15));
$menu=array(1=>'menu 1',3=>'menu 3',5=>'menu 5',7=>'menu 7',9=>'menu 9',10=>'menu 10',15=>'menu 15');
//1. loop array and store parents and children
foreach($arr as $k=>$v){
$P[$v[0]]=$v[0];
$PC[$v[1]]=$v[0];
}
//2a: filter out the real children
$C = array_diff_key($PC,$P);
//2b: get the parent_child combinations
$PC=array_diff_key($PC,$C);
//3: Get the real parent
$P=array_diff_key($P,$PC);
//Sorting the arrays is only needed if the starting array is not ordered
ksort($P);
ksort($PC);
ksort($C);
//3: Building a menu
// Create LONELY CHILDS
foreach($C as $k=>$v){
if(!isset($MC[$v])){$MC[$v]=array();}
$MC[$v][]='<li>'.$menu[$k].'</li>';
}
// Build the PARENT-CHILD menu by adding the CHILDREN to their rightfull parents
foreach($PC as $k=>$v){
if(!isset($MPC[$v])){$MPC[$v]=array();}
// $MPC[$v][]='<ul><li>'.$menu[$k].'</li><ul>'.implode('',$MC[$k]).'</ul></ul>'; //(OLD)
$MPC[$v][]='<ul><li>'.$menu[$k].'<ul>'.implode('',$MC[$k]).'</ul></li></ul>'; //**NEW**
}
// Create the REAL PARENT
foreach($P as $k=>$v){
if(!isset($MP[$v])){$MP[$v]=array();}
$MP[$v][]='<ul><li>'.$menu[$k].implode('',$MPC[$k]).'</li></ul>';
}
//CREATE FINAL MENU
$menu=array();
foreach($MP as $k=>$v){
$menu[]=implode('',$v);
}
//$menu='<ul>'.implode('',$menu).'</ul>'; //(OLD)
$menu=implode('',$menu); //**NEW**
echo $menu;
The result of the above:
EDIT changed two lines to create valid HTML
And a new fiddle