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Research
Security News
Malicious PyPI Package Exploits Deezer API for Coordinated Music Piracy
Socket researchers uncovered a malicious PyPI package exploiting Deezer’s API to enable coordinated music piracy through API abuse and C2 server control.
react-jsx-highstock
Advanced tools
Highcharts (including Highstock) charts built using React components
This package exposes everything from react-jsx-highcharts
, but additionally provides components for building Highstock charts.
N.B. You can build both Highcharts and Highstock charts from this package.
A project for integrating Highcharts into a React app, with proper React components for each Highcharts/Highstock component. Inspired by Recharts, but for Highcharts, obviously.
Unlike other React Highcharts wrapper libraries, React JSX Highcharts is designed to be dynamic - it is optimised for interactive charts that need to adapt to business logic in your React application.
Other Highcharts wrappers completely destroy and recreate the chart when the configuration options change, which is very wasteful and inefficient.
React JSX Highcharts uses a different approach, by providing React components for each Highcharts component, we can observe exactly which prop has changed and call the optimal Highcharts method behind the scenes.
For example, if the data
prop were to change on a <Series />
component, React JSX Highcharts can follow Highcharts best practices and use the setData
method rather than the more expensive update
.
React JSX Highcharts also enables you to write your own Highcharts components, via it's powerful higher order components.
npm install --save react-jsx-highstock
You'll need the peer dependencies too
npm install --save react react-dom prop-types highcharts@^6.0.0
The intention of this library is to provide a very thin abstraction of Highcharts using React components. This has been achieved by passing Highcharts configuration options as component props.
In the vast majority of cases, the name of the configuration option, and the name of the component prop are the same.
<Tooltip />
component
<Tooltip padding={10} hideDelay={250} shape="square" split />
This corresponds to the Highcharts' tooltip
configuration of
tooltip: {
enabled: true, // This is assumed when component is mounted
padding: 10,
hideDelay: 250,
shape: 'square',
split: true
}
We aim to pass all configuration options using the same name, so we use Highcharts' documentation to figure out how to achieve the same with React JSX Highcharts.
There are two exceptions to the above;
Where Highcharts events are concerned - instead of passing events
as an object, we use the React convention onEventName.
<SplineSeries id="my-series" data={myData} onHide={this.handleHide} onShow={this.handleShow} />
This would correspond to the Highcharts configuration
series: [{
type: 'spline',
id: 'my-series',
data: myData,
events: { hide: this.handleHide, show: this.handleShow }
}]
text
configuration options are passed as a React child
<Title>Some Text Here</Title>
This would correspond to the Highcharts configuration
title: {
text: 'Some Text Here'
}
// import Highcharts from 'highcharts/highstock' - Import Highstock from Highcharts
render () {
return (
<HighchartsStockChart>
<Chart onClick={this.handleClick} zoomType="x" />
<Title>Highstocks Example</Title>
<Legend>
<Legend.Title>Key</Legend.Title>
</Legend>
<RangeSelector>
<RangeSelector.Button count={1} type="day">1d</RangeSelector.Button>
<RangeSelector.Button count={7} type="day">7d</RangeSelector.Button>
<RangeSelector.Button count={1} type="month">1m</RangeSelector.Button>
<RangeSelector.Button type="all">All</RangeSelector.Button>
<RangeSelector.Input boxBorderColor="#7cb5ec" />
</RangeSelector>
<Tooltip />
<XAxis>
<XAxis.Title>Time</XAxis.Title>
</XAxis>
<YAxis>
<YAxis.Title>Price</YAxis.Title>
<AreaSplineSeries id="profit" name="Profit" data={data1} />
</YAxis>
<YAxis opposite>
<YAxis.Title>Social Buzz</YAxis.Title>
<SplineSeries id="twitter" name="Twitter mentions" data={data2} />
</YAxis>
<Navigator>
<Navigator.Series seriesId="profit" />
<Navigator.Series seriesId="twitter" />
</Navigator>
</HighchartsStockChart>
);
}
// Provide Highcharts (Highstock) object for library to interact with
export default withHighcharts(MyComponent, Highcharts);
In progress... see here.
For the vast majority of cases, if your chart works in v2 of React JSX Highstock it should work in v3 without any required changes.
Ok, so what about the minority of cases?
v3 is built on top of the new Context API added in React 16.3, using the fantastic create-react-context polyfill for previous React 16 versions.
While polyfills for React 15 exist, I want to minimise the amount of use cases supported, going forward.
This is an advanced feature, but if this impacts you, see the guide here
See the guide here
As of 3.x you are no longer required to use IDs for Axis, Series and PlotLines/Bands
As of 2.1.0 Highcharts 6 is supported
As of 2.x you are required to use the withHighcharts
HOC to inject the Highcharts object (see below)
As of 1.2.0 React JSX Highstock supports using Immutable.js data structures as Series data.
Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property 'stockChart' of undefined
You are probably importing Highcharts rather than Highstock. Change you Highcharts import to...
import Highcharts from 'highcharts/highstock';
Highcharts error #17
You likely need to add an extra Highcharts module to support the requested series type, this is usually Highcharts more.
import Highcharts from 'highcharts/highstock';
import addHighchartsMore from 'highcharts/highcharts-more';
addHighchartsMore(Highcharts);
FAQs
Highcharts (including Highstock) charts built using React components
The npm package react-jsx-highstock receives a total of 2,009 weekly downloads. As such, react-jsx-highstock popularity was classified as popular.
We found that react-jsx-highstock demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 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.
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