Graph

This is the base command that defines a graph.

graph "myGraph" {
    edge start,middle,end        
}

The basic syntax is Graph [String] [Scriptblock]. The output of this command is a [string[]] containing a graph definition in the GraphViz DOT language.

This is the output from the command above:

digraph myGraph {
    "start"->"middle" 
    "middle"->"end" 
}

In this simple example, there is not much difference. Most simple graphs could easily be crafted by hand using the native DOT syntax. The goal of this module is to make the more complicated or scripted graphs easier to work with.

Knowing that the graph command gives us a [string[]] will allow us to do two different things.

Save a graph to a variable

The most basic thing we can do is just save it to a variable.

$firstGraph = graph "myGraph" {
    edge start,middle,end        
}

Once you have it in that variable, we can save it to a file.

Set-Content -Path $path -Value $firstGraph

If you are already comfortable working with GraphViz, you can have it process this $path file directly. Or you can use my helper function Export-PSGraph -Source $file to generate the final image.

Pipe to Export-Path

The other thing we can do is pipe it directly to the export function to get our image.

graph "myGraph" {
    edge start,middle,end        
} Export-PSGraph -DestinationPath $path

Creative use of scriptblocks

Don't forget that the body of the graph is a Powershell script block. You can use regular Powershell inside it if you need to.

graph myGraph {
    $csv | %{edge -from $_.boss -to $_.employee}
}