Extension:TreeAndMenu

The TreeAndMenu extension allows for dynamic dropdown menus, merging the best JavaScript dynamic menu (Sons of Suckerfish) into the TreeView code base, and renamed the extension from TreeView5 to TreeAndMenu.

This extension makes bullet lists into folder trees or dynamic drop-down menus. It has been tested successfully on MediaWiki versions 1.6.10, 1.8.4, 1.9.3, 1.10.2, 1.11.0, 1.12.0, 1.13.1, 1.14.0, 1.15.0, 1.16.5, 1.17.1, 1.18.1, 1.19.0. And is known to work on Safari, IE6, IE7 and all Mozilla based browsers such as Firefox and SeaMonkey.

CSS styles for trees (only required for old versions of TreeAndMenu)
The style of trees is defined using CSS by adding the rules to your page. An example set of CSS rules have been included below which are those supplied with the dTree source code.

CSS styles for menus
The look and layout of dynamic menus can also be configured purely in CSS by adding the rules to your page. Below is an example that was used in the example at OrganicDesign:Extension talk:TreeAndMenu.php.

Usage
Tree-views are created by surrounding a normal nested bullet list within the following couple of examples:

The second tree example uses a tree-view parameter called openlevels to make the tree expand by default to one level. Currently the parameter can only be supplied on a per-tree basis, to have different branches open to different depths requires multiple tree definitions. The second argument is used to add a label to the tree (as shown on the tree at http://www.organicdesign.co.nz).

Parser function parameters

 * root= The content of the root node. Later this will also affect how sub-trees work
 * id= A tree must be given a unique identifier if you want its state to be persistent
 * openlevels= Opens a tree to specified depth by default
 * open= equals top | bottom
 * close= equals top | bottom

Images

 * root
 * folder
 * folderOpen
 * node
 * empty
 * line
 * join
 * joinBottom
 * plus
 * plusBottom
 * minus
 * minusBottom
 * nlPlus
 * nlMinus

Dynamic Trees and Menus
You can use transclusion to embed the content of trees from other articles, or dynamically manipulate the content. For example a DPL query could generate the body of a treeview statement. Articles containing trees should not have any whitespace above the wikitex markup specifying the parser function tree otherwise the rendering can fail. Here's a dynamic example used in conjunction with Extension:Simple Security which creates a tree which exhibits some links that are only visible for sysops.


 * Note: The tree-view code will remove any empty items so they can work conditionally like this.

Here's another example of a dynamic tree using the DPL extension to make a tree which draws its items from all the articles in the foo category.

The query uses some DPL parameters to ensure that the results are preceded by double asterisks so that the items can appear inside the root node. See also this example for a more advanced use of DPL with tree-view to create a menu which contains two levels of outgoing links from a given page, or incoming pages to a given page.

Sub-trees
Trees can be transcluded within other trees so we can define large trees from structures of smaller trees. Such sub-trees are defined using the following syntax:

In this example, an article called Tree2 is transcluded as an item in Tree1. Tree2 is defined as a normal tree starting at root which can be used elsewhere in the normal way. The tree-view code matches nested trees and adjusts them to the appropriate depth for them to seemlessly integrate into single whole tree. The class and other attributes of sub-trees are ignored and the whole tree renders in accord with the attributes of the root tree.

Adding a treeview to the sidebar (MediaWiki 1.18+)
As of MediaWiki-1.18, I've found a good way to get wikitext into the sidebar is to attach a function to the BeforePageDisplay hook with the following content:

This creates a CSS-addressable div element containing the parsed content from the MediaWiki:Sidebar article. You can then use some JavaScript added to your MediaWiki:Common.js to move the element into a more appropriate location in the page DOM. For example the following JavaScript snippet inserts the rendered wikitext below the site logo.

Adding a treeview to the sidebar <1.18 (if using monobook skin)
One of the most common uses for the treeview is to replace the links in the sidebar with a tree. The following code can be added to your LocalSettings.php file after the treeview include line which allows a wiki article to be added to the sidebar below the toolbox. This example adds the article named "MediaWiki:NavTree" which can contain your tree, or any other wikitext content you'd like in your sidebar such as user-specific bookmarks etc.

If you want to also remove the existing toolbox and navigation links, you can use CSS as in the following example (the toolbox needs to be removed slightly more specifically than navigation because the tree-view renders inside its main div element). CSS rules can be added to the MediaWiki:Common.css article, remember to refresh your browser to force the CSS to reload to see the changes take effect.


 * You may also need to add width: 100%; in your tree-view CSS to fix IE alignment issues when adding to the sidebar.

Adding a treeview to the sidebar (if using Vector skin)
Change the first line of the above code to:

And render using IE and Safari, the toolbox was still showing. This fixes it.

Sites using TreeAndMenu
Here's a list of wikis with the tree view installed:
 * OrganicDesign - MediaWiki version 1.16.5 -- in the sidebar below the toolbar
 * http://semeb.com/dpldemo - Demo website for two other MediaWiki Extensions -- in the sidebar below the toolbar
 * Citizendium -  Used to redesign the sidebar and probably to organise content in some ways, see citizendium:CZ Talk:Treeview Extension
 * http://pcthailand.org Uses a 4-level dynamic dropdown menu - Mediawiki version 1.17.0

Opening a tree to the current page
Here's a useful snippet of JS that can be put into MediaWiki:Common.js to open the tree to the current page. It finds and .self links in the tree and opens the tree to those nodes. You need to give your tree an id attribute so you can refer to it. Then check the source and find out what the JS object of the tree is called (it will be a new dTree statement), basically it's just the id attribute with non-alphanumerics stripped and appended to "tam". In the following example the tree being adjusted has the id attribute of "sidebar-tree".

Change Log
Refer to SVN for changes to TreeAndMenu.php, or to a historical revision of this article for change log and other information about older versions of this extension.