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Introducing Webhook Events for Alert Changes
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@panter/react-charts
Advanced tools
Simple, immersive & interactive charts for React
$ yarn add react-charts
# or
$ npm i react-charts --save
This will render a very basic line chart:
import React from "react";
import { Chart } from "react-charts";
const lineChart = (
<Chart
data={[
{
label: "Series 1",
data: [[0, 1], [1, 2], [2, 4], [3, 2], [4, 7]]
},
{
label: "Series 2",
data: [[0, 3], [1, 1], [2, 5], [3, 6], [4, 4]]
}
]}
axes={[
{ primary: true, type: "linear", position: "bottom" },
{ type: "linear", position: "left" }
]}
/>
);
React-Charts uses a common and very flexible data model based on arrays of series and arrays of datums. You can either use the model defaults directly, or use data accessors to materialize this structure.
Typical visualization data can come in practically any shape and size. The following examples show data structures that are all reasonably equivalent at some level since they each contain an array of series[] and datums[]. They also show how to parse that data.
In the following example, there is no need to use any accessors. The default accessors are able to easily understand this format:
const data = [
{
label: "Series 1",
data: [{ x: 1, y: 10 }, { x: 2, y: 10 }, { x: 3, y: 10 }]
},
{
label: "Series 2",
data: [{ x: 1, y: 10 }, { x: 2, y: 10 }, { x: 3, y: 10 }]
},
{
label: "Series 3",
data: [{ x: 1, y: 10 }, { x: 2, y: 10 }, { x: 3, y: 10 }]
}
];
<Chart data={data} />;
In the following example, there is no need to use any accessors. The default accessors are able to easily understand this format, but please note that this format limits you from passing any meta data about your series and datums.
const data = [
[[1, 10], [2, 10], [3, 10]],
[[1, 10], [2, 10], [3, 10]],
[[1, 10], [2, 10], [3, 10]]
];
<Chart data={data} />;
When data isn't in a convenient format for React Charts, your first instinct will be to transform your data into the above formats. Don't do that! There is an easier way 🎉 We can use the Chart components' accessor props to point things in the right direction. Accessor props pass the original data and the series/datums you return down the line to form a new data model. See the <Chart> component for all available accessors.
In the following example, the data is in a very funky format, but at it's core is the same as the previous examples.
const data = {
axis: [1, 2, 3],
lines: [
{ data: [{ value: 10 }, { value: 10 }, { value: 10 }] },
{ data: [{ value: 10 }, { value: 10 }, { value: 10 }] },
{ data: [{ value: 10 }, { value: 10 }, { value: 10 }] }
]
};
<Chart
// Pass the original data object
data={data}
// Use data.lines to represent the different series
getSeries={data => data.lines}
// Use data.lines[n].data to represent the different datums for each series
getDatums={serie => serie.data}
// Use the original data object and the datum index to reference the datum's primary value.
getPrimary={(datum, i, series, seriesIndex, data) => data.axis[i]}
// Use data.lines[n].data[n].value as each datums secondary value
getSecondary={datum => datum.value}
/>;
Multiple series are often useless without labels. By default, React Charts looks for the label value on the series object you pass it. If not found, it will simply label your series as Series [n], where [n] is the zero-based index of the series, plus 1.
If the default label accessor doesn't suit your needs, then you can use the <Chart> component's getLabel accessor prop:
const data = [{
specialLabel: 'Hello World!',
data: [...]
}]
<Chart data={data} getLabel={series => series.specialLabel} />
React Charts supports an axes prop that handles both the underlying scale and visual rendering. These axes can be combined and configured to plot data in many ways. To date, we have the following scale types available:
linear - A continuous axis used for plotting numerical data on an evenly distributed scale. Works well both as a primary and secondary axis.ordinal - A banded axis commonly used to plot categories or ordinal information. Works well as the primary axis for bar charts.time - A continuous axis used for plotting localized times and dates on an evenly distributed scale. Works well as a primary axis.utc - Similar to the time scale, but supports UTC datetimes instead of localized datetimes. Works well as a primary axis.log - A continuous axis used for plotting numerical data on a logarithmically distributed scale. Works well as a secondary axis
pie - A standalone numerical axis used for plotting arc lengths on a pie chart. Use this as the only axis when plotting a Pie chart. -->Axes are a required component of a React Chart and can used like so:
import { Chart } from 'react-charts`
<Chart
axes={[
{ primary: true, type: "time", position: "bottom" },
{ type: "linear", position: "left" }
]}
/>
For more information on usage and API, see the axes prop
lineareabarbubblepieExample
<Chart series={{ curve: "cardinal" }} />
<Chart /> Props
getSeries() - Responsible for returning an array of series.
() => nulldata - The originalObjectgetLabel()
() => nullObjectgetSeriesID()
() => nullObjectgetDatums()
() => nullObjectgetPrimary()
() => nullObjectgetSecondary()
() => nullObjectCurve Types
All series types that support lines or curves can be configured to use any curve function from d3-shape by passing one of the following strings as the curve prop to a series component. You may also pass your own curve function directly from d3 or if you're feeling powerful, even create your own!
Note the following string correspond to their respective d3 curve functions but with the curve prefix removed.
basisClosedbasisOpenbasisbundlecardinalClosedcardinalOpencardinalcatmullRomClosedcatmullRomOpencatmullRomlinearClosedlinearmonotoneX (default)monotoneYnaturalstepstepAfterstepBeforeFAQs
Charts for React
We found that @panter/react-charts demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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