Update 6/4/14
See also Mike Bostock's answer here for changes in D3 v.3 and the related example. I think this probably supersedes the answer below.
Update 2/18/2014
I think @ahaarnos's answer is preferable if you want the entire SVG to pan and zoom. The nested g
elements in my answer below are really only necessary if you have non-zooming elements in the same SVG (not the case in the original question). If you do apply the behavior to a g
element, then a background rect
or similar element is required to ensure that the g
receives pointer events.
Original Answer
I got this working based on the zoom-pan-transform example - you can see my jsFiddle here: http://jsfiddle.net/nrabinowitz/QMKm3/
It was a bit more complex than I had hoped - you have to nest several g
elements to get it to work, set the SVG's pointer-events
attribute to all
, and then append a background rectangle to receive the pointer events (otherwise it only works when the pointer is over a node or link). The redraw
function is comparatively simple, just setting a transform on the innermost g
:
var vis = d3.select("#chart")
.append("svg:svg")
.attr("width", w)
.attr("height", h)
.attr("pointer-events", "all")
.append('svg:g')
.call(d3.behavior.zoom().on("zoom", redraw))
.append('svg:g');
vis.append('svg:rect')
.attr('width', w)
.attr('height', h)
.attr('fill', 'white');
function redraw() {
console.log("here", d3.event.translate, d3.event.scale);
vis.attr("transform",
"translate(" + d3.event.translate + ")"
+ " scale(" + d3.event.scale + ")");
}
This effectively scales the entire SVG, so it scales stroke width as well, like zooming in on an image.
There is another example that illustrates a similar technique.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…