forest tree nodes
I'd like to clean up my tree by drawing an edge between parent nodes. In the following, I'd like to have the 0
nodes (which are children now) adjacent to the numbered nodes (ie on the "parent" level). How might I do this? Am I missing something simple? Thanks!
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm}
[0, green
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[2, red
[0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red
[0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
end{forest}
end{document}
by letting each 0
node be on the same level as the parents and connecting the parent.
That is, I'd like it to look something like
0 ----- 0
/
0 --- 1 2 --- 0
/
2 3
tikz-trees forest trees
add a comment |
I'd like to clean up my tree by drawing an edge between parent nodes. In the following, I'd like to have the 0
nodes (which are children now) adjacent to the numbered nodes (ie on the "parent" level). How might I do this? Am I missing something simple? Thanks!
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm}
[0, green
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[2, red
[0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red
[0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
end{forest}
end{document}
by letting each 0
node be on the same level as the parents and connecting the parent.
That is, I'd like it to look something like
0 ----- 0
/
0 --- 1 2 --- 0
/
2 3
tikz-trees forest trees
Normally you can achieve this by adding appropriatetier
s but in your tree the0
nodes occur at all levels.
– marmot
4 hours ago
@marmot: would it be possible to do that just with the first0
node, for example? As in adding two0
nodes at the top level, one with the remaining full tree, and one which is the final node?
– rrrrr
3 hours ago
You could trydocumentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document} begin{forest} for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm} [0, green [0, green,tier=murmel] [1, red [0, green,tier=murmel] [2, red [0, green] [3, red] ] [3, red [0, green] [2, red] ] ] (rest of your tree start with [2, red) end{forest}end{document}
but this doesn't look convincing to me. This is not because forest cannot do it, but because I do not understand your request.
– marmot
2 hours ago
@marmot: thanks, edited question to be more clear
– rrrrr
2 hours ago
To attract more users to your question, please add a preamble:documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document}
andend{document}
, show the current output and then the sketch of what you want to achieve.
– marmot
2 hours ago
add a comment |
I'd like to clean up my tree by drawing an edge between parent nodes. In the following, I'd like to have the 0
nodes (which are children now) adjacent to the numbered nodes (ie on the "parent" level). How might I do this? Am I missing something simple? Thanks!
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm}
[0, green
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[2, red
[0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red
[0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
end{forest}
end{document}
by letting each 0
node be on the same level as the parents and connecting the parent.
That is, I'd like it to look something like
0 ----- 0
/
0 --- 1 2 --- 0
/
2 3
tikz-trees forest trees
I'd like to clean up my tree by drawing an edge between parent nodes. In the following, I'd like to have the 0
nodes (which are children now) adjacent to the numbered nodes (ie on the "parent" level). How might I do this? Am I missing something simple? Thanks!
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm}
[0, green
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[2, red
[0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red
[0, green]
[1, red
[0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red
[0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
end{forest}
end{document}
by letting each 0
node be on the same level as the parents and connecting the parent.
That is, I'd like it to look something like
0 ----- 0
/
0 --- 1 2 --- 0
/
2 3
tikz-trees forest trees
tikz-trees forest trees
edited 2 hours ago
rrrrr
asked 4 hours ago
rrrrrrrrrr
20217
20217
Normally you can achieve this by adding appropriatetier
s but in your tree the0
nodes occur at all levels.
– marmot
4 hours ago
@marmot: would it be possible to do that just with the first0
node, for example? As in adding two0
nodes at the top level, one with the remaining full tree, and one which is the final node?
– rrrrr
3 hours ago
You could trydocumentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document} begin{forest} for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm} [0, green [0, green,tier=murmel] [1, red [0, green,tier=murmel] [2, red [0, green] [3, red] ] [3, red [0, green] [2, red] ] ] (rest of your tree start with [2, red) end{forest}end{document}
but this doesn't look convincing to me. This is not because forest cannot do it, but because I do not understand your request.
– marmot
2 hours ago
@marmot: thanks, edited question to be more clear
– rrrrr
2 hours ago
To attract more users to your question, please add a preamble:documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document}
andend{document}
, show the current output and then the sketch of what you want to achieve.
– marmot
2 hours ago
add a comment |
Normally you can achieve this by adding appropriatetier
s but in your tree the0
nodes occur at all levels.
– marmot
4 hours ago
@marmot: would it be possible to do that just with the first0
node, for example? As in adding two0
nodes at the top level, one with the remaining full tree, and one which is the final node?
– rrrrr
3 hours ago
You could trydocumentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document} begin{forest} for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm} [0, green [0, green,tier=murmel] [1, red [0, green,tier=murmel] [2, red [0, green] [3, red] ] [3, red [0, green] [2, red] ] ] (rest of your tree start with [2, red) end{forest}end{document}
but this doesn't look convincing to me. This is not because forest cannot do it, but because I do not understand your request.
– marmot
2 hours ago
@marmot: thanks, edited question to be more clear
– rrrrr
2 hours ago
To attract more users to your question, please add a preamble:documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document}
andend{document}
, show the current output and then the sketch of what you want to achieve.
– marmot
2 hours ago
Normally you can achieve this by adding appropriate
tier
s but in your tree the 0
nodes occur at all levels.– marmot
4 hours ago
Normally you can achieve this by adding appropriate
tier
s but in your tree the 0
nodes occur at all levels.– marmot
4 hours ago
@marmot: would it be possible to do that just with the first
0
node, for example? As in adding two 0
nodes at the top level, one with the remaining full tree, and one which is the final node?– rrrrr
3 hours ago
@marmot: would it be possible to do that just with the first
0
node, for example? As in adding two 0
nodes at the top level, one with the remaining full tree, and one which is the final node?– rrrrr
3 hours ago
You could try
documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document} begin{forest} for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm} [0, green [0, green,tier=murmel] [1, red [0, green,tier=murmel] [2, red [0, green] [3, red] ] [3, red [0, green] [2, red] ] ] (rest of your tree start with [2, red) end{forest}end{document}
but this doesn't look convincing to me. This is not because forest cannot do it, but because I do not understand your request.– marmot
2 hours ago
You could try
documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document} begin{forest} for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm} [0, green [0, green,tier=murmel] [1, red [0, green,tier=murmel] [2, red [0, green] [3, red] ] [3, red [0, green] [2, red] ] ] (rest of your tree start with [2, red) end{forest}end{document}
but this doesn't look convincing to me. This is not because forest cannot do it, but because I do not understand your request.– marmot
2 hours ago
@marmot: thanks, edited question to be more clear
– rrrrr
2 hours ago
@marmot: thanks, edited question to be more clear
– rrrrr
2 hours ago
To attract more users to your question, please add a preamble:
documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document}
and end{document}
, show the current output and then the sketch of what you want to achieve.– marmot
2 hours ago
To attract more users to your question, please add a preamble:
documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document}
and end{document}
, show the current output and then the sketch of what you want to achieve.– marmot
2 hours ago
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
This not really an answer but more to clarify if you want something of this sort.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=15mm}
[0, green,alias=L1
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L2
% [0, green]
[2, red,alias=L3
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L4
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red,alias=L5
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L6
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L7
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red,alias=L8
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L9
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red,alias=L10
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
foreach X in {1,...,10}
{ifnumX=1
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
else
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
fi}
end{forest}
end{document}
precisely, thank you!!
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
As a follow-on, how might I annotate the aliased edges to fromnonzero
to0
nodes?
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
1
@rrrrr What do you mean by "annotate"? Like putting labels on the edges? If so, always the same? (One can put labels on the path withdraw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0} node[midway,above]{text};
.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Not a tikz-tree
solution: I just try to replicate your graph using normal TikZ
documentclass[tikz,margin=3mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node [circle,draw] (0c) at (0,0) {0};
node [circle,draw] (1) at ($(0c)+(-120:1.5)$) {1};
node [circle,draw] (2r) at ($(0c)+(-60:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (2l) at ($(1)+(-120:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (3) at ($(1)+(-60:1.5)$) {3};
node [circle,draw] (0al) at ($(0c)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0bl) at ($(1)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0r) at ($(2r)+(1.5,0)$) {0};
draw (0c)--(1)
(0c)--(2r)
(1)--(2l)
(1)--(3)
(0c)--(0al)
(1)--(0bl)
(2r)--(0r);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
Your Answer
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This not really an answer but more to clarify if you want something of this sort.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=15mm}
[0, green,alias=L1
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L2
% [0, green]
[2, red,alias=L3
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L4
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red,alias=L5
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L6
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L7
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red,alias=L8
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L9
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red,alias=L10
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
foreach X in {1,...,10}
{ifnumX=1
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
else
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
fi}
end{forest}
end{document}
precisely, thank you!!
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
As a follow-on, how might I annotate the aliased edges to fromnonzero
to0
nodes?
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
1
@rrrrr What do you mean by "annotate"? Like putting labels on the edges? If so, always the same? (One can put labels on the path withdraw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0} node[midway,above]{text};
.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
This not really an answer but more to clarify if you want something of this sort.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=15mm}
[0, green,alias=L1
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L2
% [0, green]
[2, red,alias=L3
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L4
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red,alias=L5
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L6
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L7
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red,alias=L8
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L9
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red,alias=L10
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
foreach X in {1,...,10}
{ifnumX=1
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
else
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
fi}
end{forest}
end{document}
precisely, thank you!!
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
As a follow-on, how might I annotate the aliased edges to fromnonzero
to0
nodes?
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
1
@rrrrr What do you mean by "annotate"? Like putting labels on the edges? If so, always the same? (One can put labels on the path withdraw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0} node[midway,above]{text};
.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
This not really an answer but more to clarify if you want something of this sort.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=15mm}
[0, green,alias=L1
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L2
% [0, green]
[2, red,alias=L3
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L4
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red,alias=L5
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L6
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L7
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red,alias=L8
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L9
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red,alias=L10
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
foreach X in {1,...,10}
{ifnumX=1
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
else
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
fi}
end{forest}
end{document}
This not really an answer but more to clarify if you want something of this sort.
documentclass{article}
usepackage{forest}
begin{document}
begin{forest}
for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=15mm}
[0, green,alias=L1
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L2
% [0, green]
[2, red,alias=L3
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L4
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
]
[2, red,alias=L5
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L6
% [0, green]
[3, red]
]
[3, red,alias=L7
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
[3, red,alias=L8
% [0, green]
[1, red,alias=L9
% [0, green]
[2, red]
]
[2, red,alias=L10
% [0, green]
[1, red]
]
]
]
foreach X in {1,...,10}
{ifnumX=1
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
else
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0};
fi}
end{forest}
end{document}
answered 1 hour ago
marmotmarmot
99.6k4115220
99.6k4115220
precisely, thank you!!
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
As a follow-on, how might I annotate the aliased edges to fromnonzero
to0
nodes?
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
1
@rrrrr What do you mean by "annotate"? Like putting labels on the edges? If so, always the same? (One can put labels on the path withdraw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0} node[midway,above]{text};
.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
precisely, thank you!!
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
As a follow-on, how might I annotate the aliased edges to fromnonzero
to0
nodes?
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
1
@rrrrr What do you mean by "annotate"? Like putting labels on the edges? If so, always the same? (One can put labels on the path withdraw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0} node[midway,above]{text};
.)
– marmot
1 hour ago
precisely, thank you!!
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
precisely, thank you!!
– rrrrr
1 hour ago
As a follow-on, how might I annotate the aliased edges to from
nonzero
to 0
nodes?– rrrrr
1 hour ago
As a follow-on, how might I annotate the aliased edges to from
nonzero
to 0
nodes?– rrrrr
1 hour ago
1
1
@rrrrr What do you mean by "annotate"? Like putting labels on the edges? If so, always the same? (One can put labels on the path with
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0} node[midway,above]{text};
.)– marmot
1 hour ago
@rrrrr What do you mean by "annotate"? Like putting labels on the edges? If so, always the same? (One can put labels on the path with
draw (LX) -- ++ (-1.5cm,0) node[circle,left,draw,green]{0} node[midway,above]{text};
.)– marmot
1 hour ago
add a comment |
Not a tikz-tree
solution: I just try to replicate your graph using normal TikZ
documentclass[tikz,margin=3mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node [circle,draw] (0c) at (0,0) {0};
node [circle,draw] (1) at ($(0c)+(-120:1.5)$) {1};
node [circle,draw] (2r) at ($(0c)+(-60:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (2l) at ($(1)+(-120:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (3) at ($(1)+(-60:1.5)$) {3};
node [circle,draw] (0al) at ($(0c)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0bl) at ($(1)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0r) at ($(2r)+(1.5,0)$) {0};
draw (0c)--(1)
(0c)--(2r)
(1)--(2l)
(1)--(3)
(0c)--(0al)
(1)--(0bl)
(2r)--(0r);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
Not a tikz-tree
solution: I just try to replicate your graph using normal TikZ
documentclass[tikz,margin=3mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node [circle,draw] (0c) at (0,0) {0};
node [circle,draw] (1) at ($(0c)+(-120:1.5)$) {1};
node [circle,draw] (2r) at ($(0c)+(-60:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (2l) at ($(1)+(-120:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (3) at ($(1)+(-60:1.5)$) {3};
node [circle,draw] (0al) at ($(0c)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0bl) at ($(1)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0r) at ($(2r)+(1.5,0)$) {0};
draw (0c)--(1)
(0c)--(2r)
(1)--(2l)
(1)--(3)
(0c)--(0al)
(1)--(0bl)
(2r)--(0r);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
add a comment |
Not a tikz-tree
solution: I just try to replicate your graph using normal TikZ
documentclass[tikz,margin=3mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node [circle,draw] (0c) at (0,0) {0};
node [circle,draw] (1) at ($(0c)+(-120:1.5)$) {1};
node [circle,draw] (2r) at ($(0c)+(-60:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (2l) at ($(1)+(-120:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (3) at ($(1)+(-60:1.5)$) {3};
node [circle,draw] (0al) at ($(0c)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0bl) at ($(1)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0r) at ($(2r)+(1.5,0)$) {0};
draw (0c)--(1)
(0c)--(2r)
(1)--(2l)
(1)--(3)
(0c)--(0al)
(1)--(0bl)
(2r)--(0r);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
Not a tikz-tree
solution: I just try to replicate your graph using normal TikZ
documentclass[tikz,margin=3mm]{standalone}
usetikzlibrary{calc}
begin{document}
begin{tikzpicture}
node [circle,draw] (0c) at (0,0) {0};
node [circle,draw] (1) at ($(0c)+(-120:1.5)$) {1};
node [circle,draw] (2r) at ($(0c)+(-60:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (2l) at ($(1)+(-120:1.5)$) {2};
node [circle,draw] (3) at ($(1)+(-60:1.5)$) {3};
node [circle,draw] (0al) at ($(0c)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0bl) at ($(1)+(-1.5,0)$) {0};
node [circle,draw] (0r) at ($(2r)+(1.5,0)$) {0};
draw (0c)--(1)
(0c)--(2r)
(1)--(2l)
(1)--(3)
(0c)--(0al)
(1)--(0bl)
(2r)--(0r);
end{tikzpicture}
end{document}
answered 1 hour ago
JouleVJouleV
2,808830
2,808830
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Normally you can achieve this by adding appropriate
tier
s but in your tree the0
nodes occur at all levels.– marmot
4 hours ago
@marmot: would it be possible to do that just with the first
0
node, for example? As in adding two0
nodes at the top level, one with the remaining full tree, and one which is the final node?– rrrrr
3 hours ago
You could try
documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document} begin{forest} for tree={circle, draw, l sep=20pt, s sep=5 mm} [0, green [0, green,tier=murmel] [1, red [0, green,tier=murmel] [2, red [0, green] [3, red] ] [3, red [0, green] [2, red] ] ] (rest of your tree start with [2, red) end{forest}end{document}
but this doesn't look convincing to me. This is not because forest cannot do it, but because I do not understand your request.– marmot
2 hours ago
@marmot: thanks, edited question to be more clear
– rrrrr
2 hours ago
To attract more users to your question, please add a preamble:
documentclass{article} usepackage{forest} begin{document}
andend{document}
, show the current output and then the sketch of what you want to achieve.– marmot
2 hours ago