I am developing an MVC app that retrieves data from a table in SQL Server that is structured like so:
+-----------------------------------+
| Id | Name | Hierarchy | Depth |
|-----------------------------------|
| 01 | Justin | / | 0 |
| 02 | Chris | /1 | 1 |
| 03 | Beth | /1/1 | 2 |
+-----------------------------------+
The example data in the Hierarchy column is the string representation of the hierarchyid datatype, and the Depth column is computed using the hierarchyid::GetLevel() method.
Using Entity Framework 4.1, I have mapped the above table to this class:
public class Node {
public int Id { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public string HierarchyPath { get; set; } // String representation of the hierarchyid
public int Depth { get; set; }
}
I want to use this information to display a graphical representation of the hierarchy to the user using the JS Visualizations Toolkit, which requires the data to be structured:
var node = {
id: 1,
name: 'Justin'
children: [{
id: 2,
name: 'Chris',
children: [{
id: 3,
name: 'Beth',
children: []
}]
}]
}
I'm having trouble developing the logic to convert a list of my models into a structured JSON object. Any suggestions?
EDIT: I don't have time to fix the answer below right now, but given the extra information in the question, I suspect you want to keep a Dictionary<int, HierarchicalNode> rather than a List<HierarchicalNode> so that you're not relying on any ordering...
I would forget about the JSON representation to start with, and concentrate on building an in-memory POCO representation of the hierarchy. To do that, I'd use something like this:
class HierarchicalNode
{
private readonly List<HierarchicalNode> children =
new List<HierarchicalNode>();
public List<HierarchicalNode> Children { get { return children; } }
private readonly string name;
public string Name { get { return name; } }
private readonly int id;
public int Id { get { return id; } }
public HierarchicalNode(string name, int id)
{
this.name = name;
this.id = id;
}
}
Then build up the tree like this:
// Make sure we get everything in a sensible order, parents before children
var query = context.Nodes.OrderBy(x => x.Depth);
var root = new HierarchicalNode("Root", 0);
foreach (var node in query)
{
var current = root;
foreach (string part = node.HierarchyPath.Split(new[] {'/'},
StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries))
{
int parsedPart = int.Parse(part);
current = current.Children[parsedPart - 1];
}
current.Children.Add(new HierarchicalNode(node.Name, node.Id));
}
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