hide nodes and children in D3.js using JavaScript or jQuery - javascript

I´m forking an excellent force directed layout (#eyaler http://bl.ocks.org/eyaler/1058611) with multiple options, and I would like to hide a specific node with children using jQuery or D3+JavaScript, not directly from d3 code using the toggle function. (this is important because I have an external button in the html code)
http://bl.ocks.org/carlos-andres/c3194c284763fde317b0
I tried commands like:
d3.selectAll("g#Avenger").attr("visibility", "hidden");
d3.select("g#Spathi").selectAll("*").attr("visibility", "hidden");
d3.select("g#Spathi").selectAll(this.children).attr("visibility", "hidden");
d3.select("g#Spathi + g").each(function(d){ console.log(d)});
It hides the node, but not the label and path. I also tried:
jQuery('g#Avenger').siblings().toggle();
It hides all the other nodes.
UPDATE: I tried to use the solution here: A d3.select... equivalent to jQuery.children() given from #Klaujesi and it doesn't work for me. I'm also checked another post, How to display and hide links and nodes when clicking on a node in D3 Javascript and I can´t get good results with that approach either.
Check the image; it hides node g#Spathi but not the children and paths

You has <tex> outside <g> element:
<g id="Drone" class="node" ...
<path d="M-8.378872.....city: 1;"></path>
</g>
<text dy=".35em" dx="9.45 .... city: 1;"> Drone</text>
must be:
<g id="Drone" class="node" ...
<path d="M-8.378872.....city: 1;"></path>
<text dy=".35em" dx="9.45 .... city: 1;"> Drone</text>
</g>
make <text>, <g> dependant

Related

Different behaviour updating SVG elements created with <use> tags in Chrome and Firefox

I've made a cut down version of the issue I'm having in the JSFiddle here.
I use d3.js to dynamically add SVG path elements with class symbol to the group with id grouped-shapes in the following defs tag:
<defs>
<g id="grouped-shapes">
...
</g>
</defs>
I then use this definition twice, once directly and once via a reference to the first use tag:
<g id="first-triangle">
<use xlink:href="#grouped-shapes" transform="translate(100, 100)"/>
</g>
<g id="second-triangle">
<use xlink:href="#first-triangle" transform="translate(200, 200)
rotate(30)"/>
</g>
(In this example case I could easily avoid the problem by working out everything as a transformation of the original grouped-shapes instead of doing this indirect transformation, but in my real use case this would be more complicated.)
I then set up an event listener to remove paths with class symbol on clicking the container div:
document.getElementById("kaleidoscope-container")
.addEventListener("click", function( event ) {
d3.selectAll(".symbol").remove();
}, false);
In Chrome, both groups update on clicking, but in Firefox only the first one does.
Which of these behaviours is correct? I'm looking to be able to update in both instances, as in Chrome - what is the correct way of going about this?

<button> element inside svg?

I have an interactive SVG - displayed at full window size. I want to add some buttons to it. Is it possible to add normal <button> elements inside <svg> tag?
I think not, but I'm asking if there is something similar for SVG.
From some drawing I get bad results like this:
https://jsfiddle.net/pvxr6g8k/1/
<svg version="1.1" id="svg9723" height="768" width="1268">
<g style="fill:#e6e6e6" id="g3332-7" transform="matrix(0.27404175,0,0,-0.447665,86.580009,508.16151)">
<g style="fill:#e6e6e6" clip-path="url(#clipPath3336-0-0)" id="g3334-7">
<g style="fill:#e6e6e6" transform="translate(992.5469,164.3086)" id="g3340-6">
<path inkscape:connector-curvature="0" id="path3342-2" style="fill:#e6e6e6;stroke:#241a5d;stroke-width:4.48957968;stroke-linecap:butt;stroke-linejoin:miter;stroke-miterlimit:10;stroke-dasharray:none;stroke-opacity:1" d="m 0,0 c -6.937,0 -12.58,5.645 -12.58,12.58 l 0,63.277 c 0,6.937 5.643,12.581 12.58,12.581 l 279.488,0 c 6.936,0 12.58,-5.644 12.58,-12.581 l 0,-63.277 C 292.068,5.645 286.424,0 279.488,0 L 0,0 Z"></path>
</g>
</g>
</g>
<text transform="scale(0.9324557,1.072437)" id="text3390-1" style="font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:bold;font-stretch:normal;font-size:11.87269115px;font-family:'Times New Roman';-inkscape-font-specification:'Times New Roman, Bold';writing-mode:lr-tb;fill:#000000;fill-opacity:1;fill-rule:nonzero;stroke:none" x="413.18262" y="390.15326">
<tspan style="font-style:normal;font-variant:normal;font-weight:bold;font-stretch:normal;font-family:Arial;-inkscape-font-specification:'Arial Bold'" y="390.15326" x="413.18262" id="tspan3392-0" sodipodi:role="line">BUTTON</tspan>
</text>
</svg>
The problem is not the visual appearance, but the structure, which not allow me to bind event or interact with it using JS. Not to mention the visual click effect of button "press" is harder to achieve like that.
So what is the solution for buttons in interactive SVG? Any good element like button in HTML?
I don't have to embed html button, any good button replacement would be fine
<button> is an HTML element, and therefore can't go (directly) in an SVG element.
However, you can consider using
<foreignObject position attributes>
<html:button>Button1</html:button>
</foreignObject>
Just make sure you properly declare the namespace, for instance on your root <svg> element, with xmlns:html="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
This works in most browsers. Internet Explorer doesn't support it, but Microsoft Edge does.
Alternatively, you could just draw your own button-like <rect> and attach a click event handler to it, that'll work just fine too.
You can insert at least a link (and style it afterwards like a button). I put the link with Illustrator in the SVG. Maybe a button is possible too. But you can see working links on our site http://www.kleinefische.com
In the svg it looks like:
<a xlink:href="http://www.kleinefische.com" >
<polygon fill="none" points="162,263.3 251.6,256 252.7,273.3 163,280.5"/>
<text transform="matrix(0.9967 -8.087198e-02 8.087198e-02 0.9967 162.7812 272.6545)"
fill="#FFFFFF" font-family="'TradeGothicLT-Bold'" font-size="12.9937">
/AGENTUR
</text>
</a>
You can use <foreignObject> for that. SVG allows inclusion of elements from foreign namespaces anywhere with the SVG content. In general, the SVG user agent will include the unknown elements in the DOM but will otherwise ignore unknown elements.
foreignObject
You could add an onclick property to your svg object, something like:
onclick='window.location =("http://...");'
You could try out D3JS.
See documentation here on handling mouse events: https://github.com/d3/d3-selection/blob/master/README.md#handling-events
And an example: Unable to get click event in D3 JavaScript library

How to use z-index in svg elements?

I'm using the svg circles in my project like this,
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 160 120">
<g>
<g id="one">
<circle fill="green" cx="100" cy="105" r="20" />
</g>
<g id="two">
<circle fill="orange" cx="100" cy="95" r="20" />
</g>
</g>
</svg>
And I'm using the z-index in the g tag to show the elements the first. In my project I need to use only z-index value, but I can't use the z-index to my svg elements. I have googled a lot but I didn't find anything relatively.
So please help me to use z-index in my svg.
Here is the DEMO.
Specification
In the SVG specification version 1.1 the rendering order is based on the document order:
first element -> "painted" first
Reference to the SVG 1.1. Specification
3.3 Rendering Order
Elements in an SVG document fragment have an implicit drawing order, with the first elements in the SVG document fragment getting "painted" first. Subsequent elements are painted on top of previously painted elements.
Solution (cleaner-faster)
You should put the green circle as the latest object to be drawn. So swap the two elements.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="30 70 160 120">
<!-- First draw the orange circle -->
<circle fill="orange" cx="100" cy="95" r="20"/>
<!-- Then draw the green circle over the current canvas -->
<circle fill="green" cx="100" cy="105" r="20"/>
</svg>
Here the fork of your jsFiddle.
Solution (alternative)
The tag use with the attribute xlink:href (just href for SVG 2) and as value the id of the element. Keep in mind that might not be the best solution even if the result seems fine. Having a bit of time, here the link of the specification SVG 1.1 "use" Element.
Purpose:
To avoid requiring authors to modify the referenced document to add an ID to the root element.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="30 70 160 120">
<!-- First draw the green circle -->
<circle id="one" fill="green" cx="100" cy="105" r="20" />
<!-- Then draw the orange circle over the current canvas -->
<circle id="two" fill="orange" cx="100" cy="95" r="20" />
<!-- Finally draw again the green circle over the current canvas -->
<use xlink:href="#one"/>
</svg>
Notes on SVG 2
SVG 2 Specification is the next major release and still supports the above features.
3.4. Rendering order
Elements in SVG are positioned in three dimensions. In addition to their position on the x and y axis of the SVG viewport, SVG elements are also positioned on the z axis. The position on the z-axis defines the order that they are painted.
Along the z axis, elements are grouped into stacking contexts.
3.4.1. Establishing a stacking context in SVG
...
Stacking contexts are conceptual tools used to describe the order in which elements must be painted one on top of the other when the document is rendered, ...
SVG 2 Support Mozilla - Painting
How do I know if my browser supports svg 2.0
Can I use SVG
Deprecated XLink namespace For SVG 2 use href instead of the additional deprecated namespace xlink:href (Thanks G07cha)
As others here have said, z-index is defined by the order the element appears in the DOM. If manually reordering your html isn't an option or would be difficult, you can use D3 to reorder SVG groups/objects.
Use D3 to Update DOM Order and Mimic Z-Index Functionality
Updating SVG Element Z-Index With D3
At the most basic level (and if you aren't using IDs for anything else), you can use element IDs as a stand-in for z-index and reorder with those. Beyond that you can pretty much let your imagination run wild.
Examples in code snippet
var circles = d3.selectAll('circle')
var label = d3.select('svg').append('text')
.attr('transform', 'translate(' + [5,100] + ')')
var zOrders = {
IDs: circles[0].map(function(cv){ return cv.id; }),
xPos: circles[0].map(function(cv){ return cv.cx.baseVal.value; }),
yPos: circles[0].map(function(cv){ return cv.cy.baseVal.value; }),
radii: circles[0].map(function(cv){ return cv.r.baseVal.value; }),
customOrder: [3, 4, 1, 2, 5]
}
var setOrderBy = 'IDs';
var setOrder = d3.descending;
label.text(setOrderBy);
circles.data(zOrders[setOrderBy])
circles.sort(setOrder);
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/d3/3.4.11/d3.min.js"></script>
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 400 100">
<circle id="1" fill="green" cx="50" cy="40" r="20"/>
<circle id="2" fill="orange" cx="60" cy="50" r="18"/>
<circle id="3" fill="red" cx="40" cy="55" r="10"/>
<circle id="4" fill="blue" cx="70" cy="20" r="30"/>
<circle id="5" fill="pink" cx="35" cy="20" r="15"/>
</svg>
The basic idea is:
Use D3 to select the SVG DOM elements.
var circles = d3.selectAll('circle')
Create some array of z-indices with a 1:1 relationship with your SVG elements (that you want to reorder). Z-index arrays used in the examples below are IDs, x & y position, radii, etc....
var zOrders = {
IDs: circles[0].map(function(cv){ return cv.id; }),
xPos: circles[0].map(function(cv){ return cv.cx.baseVal.value; }),
yPos: circles[0].map(function(cv){ return cv.cy.baseVal.value; }),
radii: circles[0].map(function(cv){ return cv.r.baseVal.value; }),
customOrder: [3, 4, 1, 2, 5]
}
Then, use D3 to bind your z-indices to that selection.
circles.data(zOrders[setOrderBy]);
Lastly, call D3.sort to reorder the elements in the DOM based on the data.
circles.sort(setOrder);
Examples
You can stack by ID
With leftmost SVG on top
Smallest radii on top
Or Specify an array to apply z-index for a specific ordering -- in my example code the array [3,4,1,2,5] moves/reorders the 3rd circle (in the original HTML order) to be 1st in the DOM, 4th to be 2nd, 1st to be 3rd, and so on...
Try to invert #one and #two. Have a look to this fiddle : http://jsfiddle.net/hu2pk/3/
Update
In SVG, z-index is defined by the order the element appears in the document. You can have a look to this page too if you want : https://stackoverflow.com/a/482147/1932751
You can use use.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 160 120">
<g>
<g id="one">
<circle fill="green" cx="100" cy="105" r="20" />
</g>
<g id="two">
<circle fill="orange" cx="100" cy="95" r="20" />
</g>
</g>
<use xlink:href="#one" />
</svg>
The green circle appears on top.
jsFiddle
As discussed, svgs render in order and don't take z-index into account (for now). Maybe just send the specific element to the bottom of its parent so that it'll render last.
function bringToTop(targetElement){
// put the element at the bottom of its parent
let parent = targetElement.parentNode;
parent.appendChild(targetElement);
}
// then just pass through the element you wish to bring to the top
bringToTop(document.getElementById("one"));
Worked for me.
Update
If you have a nested SVG, containing groups, you'll need to bring the item out of its parentNode.
function bringToTopofSVG(targetElement){
let parent = targetElement.ownerSVGElement;
parent.appendChild(targetElement);
}
A nice feature of SVG's is that each element contains it's location regardless of what group it's nested in :+1:
Using D3:
If you want to re-inserts each selected element, in order, as the last child of its parent.
selection.raise()
Using D3:
If you want to add the element in the reverse order to the data, use:
.insert('g', ":first-child")
Instead of .append('g')
Adding an element to top of a group element
There is no z-index for svgs. But svg determines which of your elements are the uppermost by theire position in the DOM. Thus you can remove the Object and place it to the end of the svg making it the "last rendered" element. That one is then rendered "topmost" visually.
Using jQuery:
function moveUp(thisObject){
thisObject.appendTo(thisObject.parents('svg>g'));
}
usage:
moveUp($('#myTopElement'));
Using D3.js:
d3.selection.prototype.moveUp = function() {
return this.each(function() {
this.parentNode.appendChild(this);
});
};
usage:
myTopElement.moveUp();
This is the top Google result for searches regarding z-index and SVGs. After reading all the answers, some of which are very good, I was still confused.
So for rookies like me, here is the current summary, 9 years later in 2022.
You can't use z-index with SVGs.
In SVGs, z-index is defined by the order the element appears in the document.
If you want something to appear on top, or closer to the user, draw it last or insert it before. Source
SVG 2 could support z-index but might never come out
SVG 2 is a proposal to implement that and other features but it is at risk of never moving forward.
SVG 2 reached the Candidate Recommendation stage in 2016, and was revised in 2018 and the latest draft was released on 8 June 2021. Source
However it doesn't have a lot of support and very few people are working on it. Source So don't hold your breath waiting for this.
You could use D3 but probably shouldn't
D3 a commonly used to visualize data supports z-index by binding your z-index and then sorting but it is a large and complex library and might not be the best bet if you just want a certain SVG to appear on top of a stack.
The clean, fast, and easy solutions posted as of the date of this answer are unsatisfactory. They are constructed over the flawed statement that SVG documents lack z order. Libraries are not necessary either. One line of code can perform most operations to manipulate the z order of objects or groups of objects that might be required in the development of an app that moves 2D objects around in an x-y-z space.
Z Order Definitely Exists in SVG Document Fragments
What is called an SVG document fragment is a tree of elements derived from the base node type SVGElement. The root node of an SVG document fragment is an SVGSVGElement, which corresponds to an HTML5 <svg> tag. The SVGGElement corresponds to the <g> tag and permits aggregating children.
Having a z-index attribute on the SVGElement as in CSS would defeat the SVG rendering model. Sections 3.3 and 3.4 of W3C SVG Recommendation v1.1 2nd Edition state that SVG document fragments (trees of offspring from an SVGSVGElement) are rendered using what is called a depth first search of the tree. That scheme is a z order in every sense of the term.
Z order is actually a computer vision shortcut to avoid the need for true 3D rendering with the complexities and computing demands of ray tracing. The linear equation for the implicit z-index of elements in an SVG document fragment.
z-index = z-index_of_svg_tag + depth_first_tree_index / tree_node_qty
This is important because if you want to move a circle that was below a square to above it, you simply insert the square before the circle. This can be done easily in JavaScript.
Supporting Methods
SVGElement instances have two methods that support simple and easy z order manipulation.
parent.removeChild(child)
parent.insertBefore(child, childRef)
The Correct Answer That Doesn't Create a Mess
Because the SVGGElement (<g> tag) can be removed and inserted just as easily as a SVGCircleElement or any other shape, image layers typical of Adobe products and other graphics tools can be implemented with ease using the SVGGElement. This JavaScript is essentially a Move Below command.
parent.insertBefore(parent.removeChild(gRobot), gDoorway)
If the layer of a robot drawn as children of SVGGElement gRobot was before the doorway drawn as children of SVGGElement gDoorway, the robot is now behind the doorway because the z order of the doorway is now one plus the z order of the robot.
A Move Above command is almost as easy.
parent.insertBefore(parent.removeChild(gRobot), gDoorway.nextSibling())
Just think a=a and b=b to remember this.
insert after = move above
insert before = move below
Leaving the DOM in a State Consistent With the View
The reason this answer is correct is because it is minimal and complete and, like the internals of Adobe products or other well designed graphics editors, leaves the internal representation in a state that is consistent with the view created by rendering.
Alternative But Limited Approach
Another approach commonly used is to use CSS z-index in conjunction with multiple SVG document fragments (SVG tags) with mostly transparent backgrounds in all but the bottom one. Again, this defeats the elegance of the SVG rendering model, making it difficult to move objects up or down in the z order.
NOTES:
(https://www.w3.org/TR/SVG/render.html v 1.1, 2nd Edition, 16 August 2011)
3.3 Rendering Order Elements in an SVG document fragment have an implicit drawing order, with the first elements in the SVG document
fragment getting "painted" first. Subsequent elements are painted on
top of previously painted elements.
3.4 How groups are rendered Grouping elements such as the ‘g’ element (see container elements) have the effect of producing a temporary
separate canvas initialized to transparent black onto which child
elements are painted. Upon the completion of the group, any filter
effects specified for the group are applied to create a modified
temporary canvas. The modified temporary canvas is composited into the
background, taking into account any group-level masking and opacity
settings on the group.
Another solution would be to use divs, which do use zIndex to contain the SVG elements.As here:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/28904640/4552494
We have already 2019 and z-index is still not supported in SVG.
You can see on the site SVG2 support in Mozilla that the state for z-index – Not implemented.
You can also see on the site Bug 360148 "Support the 'z-index' property on SVG elements" (Reported: 12 years ago).
But you have 3 possibilities in SVG to set it:
With element.appendChild(aChild);
With parentNode.insertBefore(newNode, referenceNode);
With targetElement.insertAdjacentElement(positionStr, newElement); (No support in IE for SVG)
Interactive demo example
With all this 3 functions.
var state = 0,
index = 100;
document.onclick = function(e)
{
if(e.target.getAttribute('class') == 'clickable')
{
var parent = e.target.parentNode;
if(state == 0)
parent.appendChild(e.target);
else if(state == 1)
parent.insertBefore(e.target, null); //null - adds it on the end
else if(state == 2)
parent.insertAdjacentElement('beforeend', e.target);
else
e.target.style.zIndex = index++;
}
};
if(!document.querySelector('svg').insertAdjacentElement)
{
var label = document.querySelectorAll('label')[2];
label.setAttribute('disabled','disabled');
label.style.color = '#aaa';
label.style.background = '#eee';
label.style.cursor = 'not-allowed';
label.title = 'This function is not supported in SVG for your browser.';
}
label{background:#cef;padding:5px;cursor:pointer}
.clickable{cursor:pointer}
With:
<label><input type="radio" name="check" onclick="state=0" checked/>appendChild()</label>
<label><input type="radio" name="check" onclick="state=1"/>insertBefore()</label><br><br>
<label><input type="radio" name="check" onclick="state=2"/>insertAdjacentElement()</label>
<label><input type="radio" name="check" onclick="state=3"/>Try it with z-index</label>
<br>
<svg width="150" height="150" viewBox="0 0 150 150">
<g stroke="none">
<rect id="i1" class="clickable" x="10" y="10" width="50" height="50" fill="#80f"/>
<rect id="i2" class="clickable" x="40" y="40" width="50" height="50" fill="#8f0"/>
<rect id="i3" class="clickable" x="70" y="70" width="50" height="50" fill="#08f"/>
</g>
</svg>
Push SVG element to last, so that its z-index will be in top. In SVG, there s no property called z-index. try below javascript to bring the element to top.
var Target = document.getElementById(event.currentTarget.id);
var svg = document.getElementById("SVGEditor");
svg.insertBefore(Target, svg.lastChild.nextSibling);
Target: Is an element for which we need to bring it to top
svg: Is the container of elements
Move to front by transform:TranslateZ
Warning: Only works in FireFox
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" viewBox="0 0 160 160" style="width:160px; height:160px;">
<g style="transform-style: preserve-3d;">
<g id="one" style="transform-style: preserve-3d;">
<circle fill="green" cx="100" cy="105" r="20" style="transform:TranslateZ(1px);"></circle>
</g>
<g id="two" style="transform-style: preserve-3d;">
<circle fill="orange" cx="100" cy="95" r="20"></circle>
</g>
</g>
</svg>
A better example of use, that I've ended up using.
<svg>
<defs>
<circle id="one" fill="green" cx="40" cy="40" r="20" />
<circle id="two" fill="orange" cx="50" cy="40" r="20"/>
</defs>
<use href="#two" />
<use href="#one" />
</svg>
To control the order you can change href attribute values of these use elements. This can be useful for animation.
Thanks to defs, circle elements are drawn only once.
jsfiddle.net/7msv2w5d
its easy to do it:
clone your items
sort cloned items
replace items by cloned
function rebuildElementsOrder( selector, orderAttr, sortFnCallback ) {
let $items = $(selector);
let $cloned = $items.clone();
$cloned.sort(sortFnCallback != null ? sortFnCallback : function(a,b) {
let i0 = a.getAttribute(orderAttr)?parseInt(a.getAttribute(orderAttr)):0,
i1 = b.getAttribute(orderAttr)?parseInt(b.getAttribute(orderAttr)):0;
return i0 > i1?1:-1;
});
$items.each(function(i, e){
e.replaceWith($cloned[i]);
})
}
$('use[order]').click(function() {
rebuildElementsOrder('use[order]', 'order');
/* you can use z-index property for inline css declaration
** getComputedStyle always return "auto" in both Internal and External CSS decl [tested in chrome]
rebuildElementsOrder( 'use[order]', null, function(a, b) {
let i0 = a.style.zIndex?parseInt(a.style.zIndex):0,
i1 = b.style.zIndex?parseInt(b.style.zIndex):0;
return i0 > i1?1:-1;
});
*/
});
use[order] {
cursor: pointer;
}
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" id="keybContainer" viewBox="0 0 150 150" xml:space="preserve">
<defs>
<symbol id="sym-cr" preserveAspectRatio="xMidYMid meet" viewBox="0 0 60 60">
<circle cx="30" cy="30" r="30" />
<text x="30" y="30" text-anchor="middle" font-size="0.45em" fill="white">
<tspan dy="0.2em">Click to reorder</tspan>
</text>
</symbol>
</defs>
<use order="1" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="#sym-cr" x="0" y="0" width="60" height="60" style="fill: #ff9700; z-index: 1;"></use>
<use order="4" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="#sym-cr" x="50" y="20" width="50" height="50" style="fill: #0D47A1; z-index: 4;"></use>
<use order="5" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="#sym-cr" x="15" y="30" width="50" height="40" style="fill: #9E9E9E; z-index: 5;"></use>
<use order="3" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="#sym-cr" x="25" y="30" width="80" height="80" style="fill: #D1E163; z-index: 3;"></use>
<use order="2" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="#sym-cr" x="30" y="0" width="50" height="70" style="fill: #00BCD4; z-index: 2;"></use>
<use order="0" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="#sym-cr" x="5" y="5" width="100" height="100" style="fill: #E91E63; z-index: 0;"></use>
</svg>
Just wanted to add a trick that works when you want to put a specific element on top.
function moveInFront(element) {
const svg = element.closest('svg'); // Find the parent SVG
svg.appendChild(element); // Append child moves the element to the end
}
This works because, and I quote the docs, "appendChild() moves [the element] from its current position to the new position" instead of adding a copy.
Note: If the element is nested, you would have to move the element to front within the group, and perhaps move the group to front as well.
use works for this purpose, but those elements that are placed with use help after is hard to manipulate...
What I couldn't figure out after I used it was: why I couldn't hover (neither mouseover, mouseenter manipulations from js would work) on the use elements to get additional functionality - like ~ showing text over the circles ~
After returned to circle reordering as it was only way to manipulate with those svg objects

How to make a g element in an SVG clickable

I understand that it is a grouping for transformations. I have also looked through the documentation and have found nothing regarding this, but was wondering whether it is possible.
Fill it with a <rect width="whatever the <g> width is" height="whatever the <g> height is"/> and make the <rect> clickable. The rect can be transparent check out the pointer-events property for how to configure clicability of the <rect>.
You can find the <g> height and width by calling getBBox.
Assign id to element, and listener.
Ex.
<g id="clickg"><circle cx="100" cy="50" r="40" stroke="black" stroke-width="2" fill="red"/><g>
$("#clickg").on("click",function () {
alert("click");
});
Super old question but it helped me out so I want to expand on one of the answers with a little more of a step-by-step guide and some more details. This is the method I made when my group was several disconnected items and I wanted the whole area including the blank areas in between to be clickable.
Get the x/y/width/height of the <g> element, you can do this easily in chrome dev tools by selecting the <g> element and entering $0.getBBox() in the console.
Create a new element as a child of your <g> like so: <rect x="TODO" y="TODO" width="TODO" height="TODO" style="pointer-events: all" />
Replace the TODO above with the info from getBBox

d3.js - how to insert new sibling elements

I have a problem with inserting new siblings to existing elements.
I have this structure
<svg>
<g>
<path class="data"></path>
<path class="data"></path>
</g>
</svg>
and want this structure
<svg>
<g>
<path class="data"></path>
<text></text>
<path class="data"></path>
<text></text>
</g>
</svg>
but if I use the d3.js insert function
d3.select("g").insert("text", "path.data");
i get the following (despite selecting by class name)
<svg>
<g>
<text></text>
<path class="data"></path>
<path class="data"></path>
</g>
</svg>
any ideas?
First of all, it's worth noting that the second argument in the insert function is a before selector. Furthermore, chained operations act on the left hand result.
So you have done
// select all the g elements (only 1)
d3.select("g")
// For each g, insert a text element before "path.data"
.insert("text", "path.data");
You want to perform an operation for each child ".data", so you need to select each of the ".data" elements and perform an action for each of them. I'm not entirely sure how d3 expects you to insert an element after a specific child. I find it much easier to use the DOM API to do the element creation and insertion, but using the d3.each function to iterate over a selection.
d3.selectAll("g > .data").each(function () {
var t = document.createElement('text');
this.parentNode.insertBefore(t, this.nextSibling);
});​

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