npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

jscharting-vue

v2.4.0

Published

JSCharting plugin for Vue.js

Downloads

1,433

Readme

JSCharting is a JavaScript data visualization library offering seamless usage with Vue across all devices and platforms. Every JSCharting license includes a full suite of 150+ chart types including standards such as pie charts, line charts, donut and bar charts. In addition, advanced chart types including Gantt charts, JavaScript Org Charts, interactive charts for stock and finance, seamless grid and calendar charts, JavaScript maps, sparklines, and micro charts all for no additional charge. JSCharting has all the features you need and many you don't yet know you want.

Example Charts: Chart Types | Feature Examples

Official JSCharting plugin for Vue.js

A Vue2 and Vue3 wrapper to use JSCharting charting library as a Vue component.

This documentation is for Vue 2.x and earlier. For Vue3, click here.

Table of Contents

  1. Install
    1. Run Examples
  2. Usage
    1. Simple Example
    2. JSCharting Component Options
    3. Typescript Typings
    4. Updating Charts
  3. Chart resources
  4. Getting a chart reference
  5. JSCLabel Component
  6. JSCGrid Component

Install

Install the jscharting-vue chart component.

npm i -D jscharting-vue

or

yarn add jscharting-vue

Run Examples

Clone the Github repo locally. Example charts are located in the /examples folder.

To view the examples you can run the webpack dev server: localhost:8080

npm run serve-examples

Or build the project manually.

npm run build-examples

Usage

Simple example

This example shows how you can use the JSCharting component of the jscharting-vue module to make a column chart.

<template>
    <JSCharting :options="chartOptions" class="columnChart"></JSCharting>
</template>

<script>
import JSCharting from 'jscharting-vue';

export default {
   name: 'columnChart',
   data() {
      return {
         chartOptions: {
            type: 'horizontal column',
            series: [
               {
                  points: [
                     { x: 'A', y: 50 },
                     { x: 'B', y: 30 },
                     { x: 'C', y: 50 }
                  ]
               }
            ]
         }
      }
   },
   components: {
      JSCharting
   }
}
</script>

<style>
.columnChart {
    height: 300px;
}
</style>

JSCharting Component Options

These customizable options are available with the JSCharting component.

| Parameter | Type | Description | | --------- | :----: | ----------- | | :options | object | JSCharting chart configuration object. Please refer to the API documentation. | | :mutable | boolean | (Optional) When set to true, chart.options() is called with the updated props instead of recreating the chart object. | :ignoreStateUpdate | boolean | (Optional) false by default. When true, the chart will ignore updates applied when reactive property is changed. This is useful when you want to update the chart directly. | | @rendered | event | (Optional) Event triggered when the chart is finished rendering. The first argument of the event handler is a reference to the created chart.|

Typescript Typings

You can use type definitions for chart configuration properties when using typescript. Import the types using:

import { JSCChartConfig } from 'jscharting'; // -> JSCChartConfig
// OR
import JSCharting, { JSC } from 'jscharting-vue'; // -> JSC.JSCChartConfig

Here's an example using types.

<template>
  <div>
    <JSCharting :options="options"></JSCharting>
  </div>
</template>

<script lang="ts">
import JSCharting, {JSC} from 'jscharting-vue';


export default {
   name: 'exampleChart',
   data() {
      let options: JSC.JSCChartConfig = {
         type: 'line', 
         title: { label: { text: 'Chart Tytle' } },
         legend: {
            position: 'inside bottom right'
         },
         xAxis: { scale: { type: 'time' } },
         series: [
            {
               name: 'Purchases',
               points: [
                  ['1/1/2020', 29.9],
                  ['1/2/2020', 71.5],
                  ['1/3/2020', 106.4],
                  ['1/6/2020', 129.2],
                  ['1/7/2020', 144.0],
                  ['1/8/2020', 176.0]
		       ]
            }
         ]
      };
      return { options };
  },
  components: {
     JSCharting
  }
};
</script>

Updating charts

There are a couple ways to update live charts.

Using reactive properties

Updating reactive data properties affects the chart in two ways, depending on the option mutable. When the component option mutable is true, only new options are passed to the chart using chart.options(). When mutable is false, changing data will reset the chart with a new instance.

Charts with mutable == true option perform better and allow charts to animate changes. Only new options that are changing need to be passed to the chart. You can animate chart updates using this more.

Using mutable == false is sometimes useful when a chart must be drastically modified. In this mode, all options should be available for a new chart instance to use.

See animating series and points for more information.

<template>
    <div>
        <JSCharting :options="options"></JSCharting>
        <button v-on:click="updateData">Update Data</button>
    </div>
</template>

<script>
import JSCharting from 'jscharting-vue';

export default {
   name: 'methodUpdate',
   data() {
      return {
         options: {
            series: [
               {
                  name: 'Purchases',
                  points: this.randomPoints()
               }
            ]
         }
      };
   },
   methods:{
      updateData() {
         this.options = {
            series: [
               {
                  name: 'Purchases',
                  points: this.randomPoints()
               }
            ]
         };
      },
      randomPoints: () => {
         let points = [];
         for (let i = 1; i < 12; i++) {
            points.push({ id: 'p' + i, x: `1/${i * 2}/2020`, y: Math.random() * 10 });
         }
         return points;
      }
   },
   components: {
      JSCharting
   }
};
</script>
Updating chart directly

JSCharting has a rich API for direct interaction with chart elements programmatically. This approach is more flexible and can update the chart more efficiently when performance is a priority. Charts can also be decoupled from data updates and managed independently.

Set the ignoreStateUpdate option to true when you want to use reactive properties for other purposes but not affect the chart itself.

See getting a chart reference. Once a chart reference is available, you can update chart options as needed with code such as:

this.$refs.chart.instance.series().points(p => p.y > 50).options({ color: "red" });

This line will make all points on a chart with y values greater than 50 red. Another example:

this.$refs.chart.instance.series(0).points(0).options({ y: 100 });

This updates the "Purchases" series with new random points.

<template>
    <div>
        <JSCharting :options="options" ref="chart"></JSCharting>
        <button v-on:click="updateData">Update Data</button>
    </div>
</template>

<script>
import JSCharting from 'jscharting-vue';

export default {
   name: 'methodUpdate',
   data() {
      return {
         options: {
            series: [
               {
                  name: 'Purchases',
                  points: this.randomPoints()
               }
            ]
         }
      };
   },
   methods:{
      updateData() {
         const chart = this.$refs.chart.instance;
         if(chart){
            chart.series('Purchases').options({points: this.randomPoints()})
         }
      },
      randomPoints: () => {
         let points = [];
         for (let i = 1; i < 12; i++) {
            points.push({ id: 'p' + i, x: `1/${i * 2}/2020`, y: Math.random() * 10 });
         }
         return points;
      }
   },
   components: {
      JSCharting
   }
};
</script>

Chart resources

The JSCharting library includes resources (modules, mapping data, polyfills, icons library) that load automatically when they are needed. The examples/ webpack vue.config.js configuration copies these resources to the ./dist/assets/jscharting folder during built.

The examples/src/App.vue file calls the JSC.defaults() function to set baseUrl option with this path globally in its constructor. All subsequent charts will be aware of the location of these resources.

import { JSC } from 'jscharting-vue';
JSC.defaults({ baseUrl: 'dist/assets/jscharting', debug:true });

Note: If the chart does not find the resources path, it will download them from a CDN. Setting debug:true in the JSC.defaults() function during development is recommended as it will alert you when the CDN fallback is used. It is recommended to use a local copy of resources in production.

Getting a chart reference

You can get a chart instance using the ref attribute:

<template>
    <JSCharting :options="options" ref="chart"></JSCharting>
</template>

<script>
import JSCharting from 'jscharting-vue';

export default {
   methods: {
      getChart() {
         return this.$refs.chart.instance;
      }
   },
   components: {
      JSCharting
   }
};
</script>

You can also store it when the chart @rendered event is executed.

<template>
    <JSCharting :options="options" @rendered="callback"></JSCharting>
</template>

<script>
import JSCharting from 'jscharting-vue';

export default {
   mounted() {
      // Using the chart reference.
         this.chart && 
            this.chart.series.add({ name: "S1", points: [{ x: 5, y: 10 }, { x: 5, y: 10 }] });
   },
   data() {
      return {
         chart: null
      }
   },
   methods:{
      callback(chart) {
         this.chart = chart;
      }
   },
   components: {
      JSCharting
   }
};
</script>

JSCLabel Component

This plugin also contains an implementation of the JSCLabel component for vue. You can use it to create very efficient micro chart SVG images in your vue projects. Here's a simple example.

<template>
    <JSCLabel :options="options" />
</template>

<script>
   import { JSCLabel } from 'jscharting-vue';

   export default {
      name: 'Microchart',
      data() {
         const data = [5,2,3,5,1];
            return {
               options: `<chart arealine data=${data.join(',')} width=200 height=50>`
            };
      },
      components: {
         JSCLabel
      }
   };
</script>

The Microchart Fast example demonstrates updating a microchart using the JSCLabel component quickly.

See the microcharts tutorial for configuration string syntax and more information.

JSCGrid Component

The JSCGrid data grid component is also included. You can use it to create data grids from JSON arrays. Here's a data grid example.

<template>
    <JSCGrid :options="options" />
</template>

<script>
   import { JSCGrid } from 'jscharting-vue';
   export default {
      name: 'Data Grid',
      data() {
         return {
            options: {
               data: [
                  ['Art', 5, 10],
                  ['Greg', 3, 6],
                  ['Olivia', 11, 8],
                  ['Steve', 11, 4],
                  ['Anna', 3, 8]
               ],
               columns: [
                  { header: 'Name' },
                  { header: 'Value One' },
                  { header: 'Value Two' },
                  { header: 'Sum', value: '{%1+%2}' }
               ]
            }
         };
      },
      components: {
         JSCGrid
      }
   };
</script>

The available options for the data grid component are.

| Parameter | Type | Description | | --------- | :----: | ----------- | | :options | object | JSCGrid configuration object. Please refer to the API documentation. | | :mutable | boolean | (Optional) When set to true, grid.options() is called with the updated props instead of recreating the grid instance. | @rendered | event | Triggered when the grid is finished rendering. The first argument of the event handler is a reference to the created grid.|

import { JSCGridConfig } from 'jscharting'; // -> JSCGridConfig
// OR
import JSCharting, { JSC } from 'jscharting-vue'; // -> JSC.JSCGridConfig

See the data grid tutorial for configuration syntax and more information.