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WardleyToGo

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A set of primitives to "code a map". In the context of the package "a map" represents a landscape. The landscape is made of "Components". Each component knows its own location on a map. Components can collaborate, meaning that they may be linked together. Therefore a map is also a graph. The entrypoint of this API is the 'Map' structure

wtg: language

wtg is a high level language to design and render Wardley Maps implemented with this SDK.

Check the online demo (wtg playground) and the doc at https://owulveryck.github.io/wardleyToGo/

Credits: this demo is heavily inspired by GraphvizOnline. It uses:

Using the library

The wtg DSL

example:

title: sample map // title is optional
/***************
  value chain 
****************/

business - cup of tea
public - cup of tea
cup of tea - cup
cup of tea -- tea
cup of tea --- hot water
hot water - water
hot water -- kettle
kettle - power

/***************
  definitions 
****************/

// you can inline the evolution
business: |....|....|...x.|.........|

public: |....|....|....|.x...|

// or create blocks
cup of tea: {
  evolution: |....|....|..x..|........|
  color: Green // you can set colors
}
cup: {
  type: buy
  evolution: |....|....|....|....x....|
}
tea: {
  type: buy
  evolution: |....|....|....|.....x....|
}
hot water: {
  evolution: |....|....|....|....x....|
  color: Blue
}
water: {
  type: outsource
  evolution: |....|....|....|.....x....|
}

// you can set the evolution with a >
kettle: {
  type: build
  evolution: |...|...x.|..>.|.......|
}
power: {
  type: outsource
  evolution: |...|...|....x|.....>..|
}

stage1: genesis / concept
stage2: custom / emerging
stage3: product / converging
stage4: commodity / accepted

you will find tools to convert the file into SVG or dot format in the examples subdir or compiled version for various platforms in the repository

If you have Go installed, you can generate the map with

cat sample.wtg | go run main.go > wtg.svg

from the examples/wtg2svg directory

The OWM parser

The library comes with a parser to handle part of the OWM syntax.

Create a map from the owm example (see https://onlinewardleymaps.com/#h4hJOoRdO4hHSljIb9 to build one):

title Tea Shop
anchor Business [0.95, 0.63]
anchor Public [0.95, 0.78]
component Cup of Tea [0.79, 0.61] label [19, -4]
component Cup [0.73, 0.78] label [19,-4] (dataProduct)
component Tea [0.63, 0.81]
component Hot Water [0.52, 0.80]
component Water [0.38, 0.82]
component Kettle [0.43, 0.35] label [-73, 4] (build)
evolve Kettle 0.62 label [22, 9] (buy)
component Power [0.1, 0.7] label [-29, 30] (outsource)
evolve Power 0.89 label [-12, 21]
Business->Cup of Tea
Public->Cup of Tea
Cup of Tea-collaboration>Cup
Cup of Tea-collaboration>Tea
Cup of Tea-collaboration>Hot Water
Hot Water->Water
Hot Water-facilitating>Kettle 
Kettle-xAsAService>Power
build Kettle


annotation 1 [[0.43,0.49],[0.08,0.79]] Standardising power allows Kettles to evolve faster
annotation 2 [0.48, 0.85] Hot water is obvious and well known
annotations [0.60, 0.02]

note +a generic note appeared [0.16, 0.36]

style wardley
streamAlignedTeam stream aligned A [0.84, 0.18, 0.76, 0.95]
enablingTeam team B [0.9, 0.30, 0.30, 0.40]
platformTeam team C [0.18, 0.61, 0.02, 0.94]
complicatedSubsystemTeam team D [0.92, 0.73, 0.45, 0.90]

output

Developing with the library

Example

First, create a component type

type dummyComponent struct {
	id       int64
	position image.Point
}

func (d *dummyComponent) GetPosition() image.Point { return d.position }

func (d *dummyComponent) String() string { return strconv.FormatInt(d.id, 10) }

func (d *dummyComponent) ID() int64 { return d.id }

Then a collaboration structure (an edge)

type dummyCollaboration struct{ simple.Edge }

func (d *dummyCollaboration) GetType() wardleyToGo.EdgeType { return 0 }

func (d *dummyCollaboration) Draw(dst draw.Image, r image.Rectangle, src image.Image, sp image.Point) {
	coordsF := utils.CalcCoords(d.F.(wardleyToGo.Component).GetPosition(), r)
	coordsT := utils.CalcCoords(d.T.(wardleyToGo.Component).GetPosition(), r)
	drawing.Line(dst, coordsF.X, coordsF.Y, coordsT.X, coordsT.Y, color.Gray{Y: 128}, [2]int{})
}

And finally create the map

	m := wardleyToGo.NewMap(0)
	c0 := &dummyComponent{id: 0, position: image.Pt(25, 25)}
	c1 := &dummyComponent{id: 1, position: image.Pt(50, 50)}
	c2 := &dummyComponent{id: 2, position: image.Pt(50, 75)}
	c3 := &dummyComponent{id: 3, position: image.Pt(75, 75)}
	m.AddComponent(c0)
	m.AddComponent(c1)
	m.AddComponent(c2)
	m.AddComponent(c3)
	// c0 -> c1
	// c1 -> c2
	// c2 -> c3
	// c1 -> c3
	m.SetCollaboration(newCollaboration(c0, c1))
	m.SetCollaboration(newCollaboration(c1, c2))
	m.SetCollaboration(newCollaboration(c2, c3))
	m.SetCollaboration(newCollaboration(c1, c3))

Generating image, png and so on.. (WIP)

the map fulfills the drawer.Drawer interface. If the components fulfills the interface as well, they are displayend on an image.

func main() {
	p := owm.NewParser(os.Stdin)
	m, err := p.Parse() // the map
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}
	im := image.NewRGBA(image.Rect(0, 0, 1400, 1100))
	canvas := image.Rect(100, 100, 1300, 1000)
	createBackground(im, canvas)

	m.Draw(im, canvas, im, image.Point{})
	png.Encode(os.Stdout, im)
}

see the examples/pngoutput directory

png output

About

Create your WardleyMaps as code/data and render it as SVG (onlinewardleymap and wtg language supported)

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