Marc suggested that we look at his work done in the Plectica application. Is there some way this could be imported into wiki? page
We've read this sort of json before and produced Hypertext Super Collaborator compatible diagrams.
Some format conversions are straight forward but still highly dependent on conventions used in the source drawings. Here we use a general approach but customize the conversion with fragments of javascript code on the wiki page that does the conversion.
As a first step we summarize the exported json to see what sort of access paths are present and how many scaler values are encountered in each. github
http://ward.dojo.fed.wiki/assets/pages/ferndale-learning-system/summary.html HEIGHT 400
Notice these 235 nodes: `.map_data.nodes[].title => 235` Five nodes don't have parents. `.map_data.nodes[].parentId => 230` These must be important roots of the structure. github
http://ward.dojo.fed.wiki/assets/pages/ferndale-learning-system/hierarchy.html HEIGHT 400
Taking a somewhat different tack than Ward, lets look at a portion of the map. Look for the related parts of the export, and see how the parts relate. See Exploring Ferndale Structure
pages/ferndale-learning-system
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Yikes. Plectica, DSRP, and VMCL are trademarks of Frameable Inc. (Wiki is a trademark of no one.)
DSRP was first described by Derek Cabrera in the book Remedial Genius. (This article contains content that is written like an advertisement) wikipedia
Frameable began five years ago as an idea to improve working from home, has blossomed into a multitude of products that make working from anywhere as easy as turning around and talking to each other. site github
Plectica was founded in 2017 by Adam Riggs, an expert at the State Department on open-data and knowledge-management challenges, and Derek Cabrera, the pioneer of modern-systems thinking. post