Security News
Bun 1.2 Released with 90% Node.js Compatibility and Built-in S3 Object Support
Bun 1.2 enhances its JavaScript runtime with 90% Node.js compatibility, built-in S3 and Postgres support, HTML Imports, and faster, cloud-first performance.
ember-cli-chartist
Advanced tools
This is an ember-cli wrapper for Chartist. It allows you to render Chartist charts in your templates using components.
In an existing ember-cli project. Install with:
npm install ember-cli-chartist --save-dev
In the template where you want the chart to appear:
{{chartist-chart data=model.chartData}}
The data
attribute is the only required attribute. Its value should be an object. Check the Chartist docs for expected data structure.
The data can be specified in an Ember route or controller. In the example above it's coming from the model which is defined in the route.
/app/routes/application.js
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.Route.extend({
model: function () {
return {
chartData: {
labels: ['Day1', 'Day2', 'Day3'],
series: [
[5, 4, 8],
[10, 2, 7],
[8, 3, 6]
]
}
}
}
});
There are three types of charts; line, bar, and pie. The default is line. You can change the chart type using the type
attribute.
/app/templates/application.hbs
{{chartist-chart type="bar" data=model.chartData}}
Chartist charts scale up and down in size. They do so at specified ratios. You can change the ratio using the ratio
attribute.
/app/templates/application.hbs
{{chartist-chart ratio="ct-golden-section" data=model.chartData}}
See Chartist docs for the full list of ratios and info on how to create your own.
Chartist charts have a whole bunch of cool configuration options. You can pass those to the chartist-chart
components with the options
attribute. You'll need to create the options object in a similar way as you do for the data
attribute object.
/app/templates/application.hbs
{{chartist-chart options=chartOptions data=model.chartData}}
/app/controllers/application.js
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.ObjectController.extend({
chartOptions: {
showArea: true,
lineSmooth: false,
axisX: {
showGrid: false
}
}
});
See the Chartist docs for all available config options. There's bunch of good-uns!
You can also configure your charts based on media queries. The same
configuration options are available, but you provide them via the responsiveOptions
attribute. They can be used in tandem with standard options
.
{{chartist-chart responsiveOptions=chartResOptions data=model.chartData}}
/app/controllers/application.js
import Ember from 'ember';
export default Ember.ObjectController.extend({
chartResOptions: [
['screen and (min-width: 640px)', {
showArea: true,
lineSmooth: false,
axisX: {
showLabel: false
}
}]
]
});
There are other ways to configure chartist-chart components that are specific to the addon.
updateOnData: By default, when the data associated with a chartist-chart is changed, the chart will be updated to reflect the data. That can be turned off by setting updateOnData to false. Note: If you use this option, you will have to manually draw and redraw the chart using Chartist methods.
{{chartist-chart updateOnData=false}}
By default, the compiled chartist.css
will be included in your app's vendor.css
. If you want to use custom CSS you can tell the addon to not include the compiled version
In your app's Brocfile.js
:
var app = new EmberApp({
'ember-cli-chartist': {
'useCustomCSS': true
}
});
If you use custom CSS, you'll likely want to import the Chartist Scss into your app's scss, you will need to install ember-cli-sass. You can then import the Chartist scss with:
In app.scss
@import "chartist";
you can also import the Chartist settings scss:
@import "chartist-settings";
For more on custom styles see the Chartist docs
chartist-chart
If you have needs that go beyond the standard component, or if you need to create a
component of your own that uses ChartistChart
as a base, you're in luck. Say you want
to create a chart that shows Fish eaten over time. You don't want this chart
tied to a specific controller, route, or model in your app. You can create a
new component that extends chartist-chart
like so:
/app/components/chart-fish-over-time.js
import ChartistChart from './chartist-chart';
export default ChartistChart.extend({
init: function () {
getAsyncDataThatReturnsPromise().then(function (data) {
this.set('data', data);
});
this._super();
},
ratio: 'ct-minor-seventh',
options: {
showPoint: false,
axisY: {
offset: 0,
showGrid: true,
},
axisX: {
showGrid: false,
}
},
responsiveOptions: [
['screen and (min-width: 640px)', {
showPoint: true,
axisY: {
offset: 50,
showLabel: true
}
}]
]
});
With that, you can display the Fish chart in any template. For example,
/app/templates/all-about-fish.js
{{chart-fish-over-time}}
There is an example app included in this repo in /tests/dummy/
. It contains examples of most of the functionality described above. To view those
examples you'll need to clone this repo and start the Ember cli server.
git clone https://github.com/tylergaw/ember-cli-chartist.git
cd ember-cli-chartist
ember serve
The example app will be running at http://localhost:4200
If you'd like to contribute to this project, that would be swell. Here are some details on doing that.
git clone
this repositorynpm install
bower install
ember server
ember test
ember test --server
FAQs
Ember Addon for Chartist.js
The npm package ember-cli-chartist receives a total of 261 weekly downloads. As such, ember-cli-chartist popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that ember-cli-chartist demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Bun 1.2 enhances its JavaScript runtime with 90% Node.js compatibility, built-in S3 and Postgres support, HTML Imports, and faster, cloud-first performance.
Security News
Biden's executive order pushes for AI-driven cybersecurity, software supply chain transparency, and stronger protections for federal and open source systems.
Security News
Fluent Assertions is facing backlash after dropping the Apache license for a commercial model, leaving users blindsided and questioning contributor rights.