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OverviewAn area chart that is rendered within the browser using SVG or VML. Displays tips when hovering over points.
A Simple Example<html> <head> <script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.gstatic.com/charts/loader.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript"> google.charts.load('current', {'packages':['corechart']}); google.charts.setOnLoadCallback(drawChart); function drawChart() { var data = google.visualization.arrayToDataTable([ ['Year', 'Sales', 'Expenses'], ['2013', 1000, 400], ['2014', 1170, 460], ['2015', 660, 1120], ['2016', 1030, 540] ]); var options = { title: 'Company Performance', hAxis: {title: 'Year', titleTextStyle: {color: '#333'}}, vAxis: {minValue: 0} }; var chart = new google.visualization.AreaChart(document.getElementById('chart_div')); chart.draw(data, options); } </script> </head> <body> <div id="chart_div" style="width: 100%; height: 500px;"></div> </body> </html>Stacking Areas
By default, the area chart draws the series on top of one another. You can stack them atop one another instead, so that the data values at each x-value are summed. In an area chart, the value for each series will always be stacked relative to the preceding series value. Stacking a mix of negative and positive values will cause the areas to overlap. It is important to note that the interpolateNulls
option does not work with stacked area charts.
On the left, isStacked
is set to false (the default), and on the right it's set to true:
Note that the order of the legend entries is different. In the second, stacked chart, the order is reversed, placing series 0 at the bottom, to better correspond with the stacking of the series elements, making the legend correspond to the data.
Stacked area charts also support 100% stacking, where the stacks of elements at each domain-value are rescaled such that they add up to 100%. The options for this are isStacked: 'percent'
, which formats each value as a percentage of 100%, and isStacked: 'relative'
, which formats each value as a fraction of 1. There is also an isStacked: 'absolute'
option, which is functionally equivalent to isStacked: true
.
Note in the 100% stacked chart on the right, the tick values are based on the relative 0-1 scale as fractions of 1.
Stackedvar options_stacked = { isStacked: true, height: 300, legend: {position: 'top', maxLines: 3}, vAxis: {minValue: 0} };100% Stacked
var options_fullStacked = { isStacked: 'relative', height: 300, legend: {position: 'top', maxLines: 3}, vAxis: { minValue: 0, ticks: [0, .3, .6, .9, 1] } };
Suppose one of your series has no data for some of your x-values. For instance, in the charts above, let's assume that drones aren't available until 2015, and Segways are not available in 2014. Note that we use null values where data is lacking, so the chart would look like this:
If those discontinuities don't appeal, you can substitute zeros for the nulls, and/or set the interpolateNulls option to true:
LoadingThe google.charts.load
package name is "corechart".
google.charts.load("current", {packages: ["corechart"]});
The visualization's class name is google.visualization.AreaChart
.
var visualization = new google.visualization.AreaChart(container);Data Format
Rows: Each row in the table represents a set of data points with the same x-axis location.
Columns:
Configuration Options Name aggregationTargetHow multiple data selections are rolled up into tooltips:
'category'
: Group selected data by x-value.'series'
: Group selected data by series.'auto'
: Group selected data by x-value if all selections have the same x-value, and by series otherwise.'none'
: Show only one tooltip per selection.aggregationTarget
will often be used in tandem with selectionMode
and tooltip.trigger
, e.g.:
var options = { // Allow multiple // simultaneous selections. selectionMode: 'multiple', // Trigger tooltips // on selections. tooltip: {trigger: 'selection'}, // Group selections // by x-value. aggregationTarget: 'category', };
Type: string
Default: 'auto'
animation.durationThe duration of the animation, in milliseconds. For details, see the animation documentation.
Type: number
Default: 0
animation.easingThe easing function applied to the animation. The following options are available:
Type: string
Default: 'linear'
animation.startupDetermines if the chart will animate on the initial draw. If true
, the chart will start at the baseline and animate to its final state.
Type: boolean
Default false
annotations.boxStyleFor charts that support annotations, the annotations.boxStyle
object controls the appearance of the boxes surrounding annotations:
var options = { annotations: { boxStyle: { // Color of the box outline. stroke: '#888', // Thickness of the box outline. strokeWidth: 1, // x-radius of the corner curvature. rx: 10, // y-radius of the corner curvature. ry: 10, // Attributes for linear gradient fill. gradient: { // Start color for gradient. color1: '#fbf6a7', // Finish color for gradient. color2: '#33b679', // Where on the boundary to start and // end the color1/color2 gradient, // relative to the upper left corner // of the boundary. x1: '0%', y1: '0%', x2: '100%', y2: '100%', // If true, the boundary for x1, // y1, x2, and y2 is the box. If // false, it's the entire chart. useObjectBoundingBoxUnits: true } } } };
This option is currently supported for area, bar, column, combo, line, and scatter charts. It is not supported by the Annotation Chart.
Type: object
Default: null
annotations.datumFor charts that support
annotations, the
annotations.datum
object lets you override Google Charts' choice for annotations provided for individual data elements (such as values displayed with each bar on a bar chart). You can control the color with
annotations.datum.stem.color
, the stem length with
annotations.datum.stem.length
, and the style with
annotations.datum.style
.
Type: object
Default: color is "black"; length is 12; style is "point".
annotations.domainFor charts that support
annotations, the
annotations.domain
object lets you override Google Charts' choice for annotations provided for a domain (the major axis of the chart, such as the X axis on a typical line chart). You can control the color with
annotations.domain.stem.color
, the stem length with
annotations.domain.stem.length
, and the style with
annotations.domain.style
.
Type: object
Default: color is "black"; length is 5; style is "point".
annotations.highContrastFor charts that support
annotations, the
annotations.highContrast
boolean lets you override Google Charts' choice of the annotation color. By default,
annotations.highContrast
is true, which causes Charts to select an annotation color with good contrast: light colors on dark backgrounds, and dark on light. If you set
annotations.highContrast
to false and don't specify your own annotation color, Google Charts will use the default series color for the annotation:
Type: boolean
Default: true
annotations.stemFor charts that support
annotations, the
annotations.stem
object lets you override Google Charts' choice for the stem style. You can control color with
annotations.stem.color
and the stem length with
annotations.stem.length
. Note that the stem length option has no effect on annotations with style
'line'
: for
'line'
datum annotations, the stem length is always the same as the text, and for
'line'
domain annotations, the stem extends across the entire chart.
Type: object
Default: color is "black"; length is 5 for domain annotations and 12 for datum annotations.
annotations.styleFor charts that support
annotations, the
annotations.style
option lets you override Google Charts' choice of the annotation type. It can be either
'line'
or
'point'
.
Type: string
Default: 'point'
annotations.textStyleFor charts that support
annotations, the
annotations.textStyle
object controls the appearance of the text of the annotation:
var options = { annotations: { textStyle: { fontName: 'Times-Roman', fontSize: 18, bold: true, italic: true, // The color of the text. color: '#871b47', // The color of the text outline. auraColor: '#d799ae', // The transparency of the text. opacity: 0.8 } } };
This option is currently supported for area, bar, column, combo, line, and scatter charts. It is not supported by the Annotation Chart .
Type: object
Default: null
areaOpacityThe default opacity of the colored area under an area chart series, where 0.0 is fully transparent and 1.0 is fully opaque. To specify opacity for an individual series, set the areaOpacity value in the series
property.
Type: number, 0.0–1.0
Default: 0.3
axisTitlesPositionWhere to place the axis titles, compared to the chart area. Supported values:
Type: string
Default: 'out'
backgroundColorThe background color for the main area of the chart. Can be either a simple HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
, or an object with the following properties.
Type: string or object
Default: 'white'
backgroundColor.strokeThe color of the chart border, as an HTML color string.
Type: string
Default: '#666'
backgroundColor.strokeWidthThe border width, in pixels.
Type: number
Default: 0
backgroundColor.fillThe chart fill color, as an HTML color string.
Type: string
Default: 'white'
chartAreaAn object with members to configure the placement and size of the chart area (where the chart itself is drawn, excluding axis and legends). Two formats are supported: a number, or a number followed by %. A simple number is a value in pixels; a number followed by % is a percentage. Example: chartArea:{left:20,top:0,width:'50%',height:'75%'}
Type: object
Default: null
chartArea.backgroundColorChart area background color. When a string is used, it can be either a hex string (e.g., '#fdc') or an English color name. When an object is used, the following properties can be provided:
stroke
: the color, provided as a hex string or English color name.strokeWidth
: if provided, draws a border around the chart area of the given width (and with the color of stroke
).Type: string or object
Default: 'white'
chartArea.leftHow far to draw the chart from the left border.
Type: number or string
Default: auto
chartArea.topHow far to draw the chart from the top border.
Type: number or string
Default: auto
chartArea.widthChart area width.
Type: number or string
Default: auto
chartArea.heightChart area height.
Type: number or string
Default: auto
colorsThe colors to use for the chart elements. An array of strings, where each element is an HTML color string, for example: colors:['red','#004411']
.
Type: Array of strings
Default: default colors
crosshairAn object containing the crosshair properties for the chart.
Type: object
Default: null
crosshair.colorThe crosshair color, expressed as either a color name (e.g., "blue") or an RGB value (e.g., "#adf").
Type: string
Type: default
crosshair.focusedAn object containing the crosshair properties upon focus.
Example: crosshair: { focused: { color: '#3bc', opacity: 0.8 } }
Type: object
Default: default
crosshair.opacityThe crosshair opacity, with 0.0
being fully transparent and 1.0
fully opaque.
Type: number
Default: 1.0
crosshair.orientationThe crosshair orientation, which can be 'vertical' for vertical hairs only, 'horizontal' for horizontal hairs only, or 'both' for traditional crosshairs.
Type: string
Default: 'both'
crosshair.selectedAn object containing the crosshair properties upon selection.
Example: crosshair: { selected: { color: '#3bc', opacity: 0.8 } }
Type: object
Default: default
crosshair.triggerWhen to display crosshairs: on 'focus'
, 'selection'
, or 'both'
.
Type: string
Default: 'both'
dataOpacityThe transparency of data points, with 1.0 being completely opaque and 0.0 fully transparent. In scatter, histogram, bar, and column charts, this refers to the visible data: dots in the scatter chart and rectangles in the others. In charts where selecting data creates a dot, such as the line and area charts, this refers to the circles that appear upon hover or selection. The combo chart exhibits both behaviors, and this option has no effect on other charts. (To change the opacity of a trendline, see trendline opacity .)
Type: number
Default: 1.0
enableInteractivityWhether the chart throws user-based events or reacts to user interaction. If false, the chart will not throw 'select' or other interaction-based events (but will throw ready or error events), and will not display hovertext or otherwise change depending on user input.
Type: boolean
Default: true
explorerThe explorer
option allows users to pan and zoom Google charts. explorer: {}
provides the default explorer behavior, enabling users to pan horizontally and vertically by dragging, and to zoom in and out by scrolling.
This feature is experimental and may change in future releases.
Note: The explorer only works with continuous axes (such as numbers or dates).
Type: object
Default: null
explorer.actionsThe Google Charts explorer supports three actions:
dragToPan
: Drag to pan around the chart horizontally and vertically. To pan only along the horizontal axis, use explorer: { axis: 'horizontal' }
. Similarly for the vertical axis.dragToZoom
: The explorer's default behavior is to zoom in and out when the user scrolls. If explorer: { actions: ['dragToZoom', 'rightClickToReset'] }
is used, dragging across a rectangular area zooms into that area. We recommend using rightClickToReset
whenever dragToZoom
is used. See explorer.maxZoomIn
, explorer.maxZoomOut
, and explorer.zoomDelta
for zoom customizations.rightClickToReset
: Right clicking on the chart returns it to the original pan and zoom level.Type: Array of strings
Default: ['dragToPan', 'rightClickToReset']
explorer.axisBy default, users can pan both horizontally and vertically when the explorer
option is used. If you want to users to only pan horizontally, use explorer: { axis: 'horizontal' }
. Similarly, explorer: { axis: 'vertical' }
enables vertical-only panning.
Type: string
Default: both horizontal and vertical panning
explorer.keepInBoundsBy default, users can pan all around, regardless of where the data is. To ensure that users don't pan beyond the original chart, use explorer: { keepInBounds: true }
.
Type: boolean
Default: false
explorer.maxZoomInThe maximum that the explorer can zoom in. By default, users will be able to zoom in enough that they'll see only 25% of the original view. Setting explorer: { maxZoomIn: .5 }
would let users zoom in only far enough to see half of the original view.
Type: number
Default: 0.25
explorer.maxZoomOutThe maximum that the explorer can zoom out. By default, users will be able to zoom out far enough that the chart will take up only 1/4 of the available space. Setting explorer: { maxZoomOut: 8 }
would let users zoom out far enough that the chart would take up only 1/8 of the available space.
Type: number
Default: 4
explorer.zoomDeltaWhen users zoom in or out, explorer.zoomDelta
determines how much they zoom by. The smaller the number, the smoother and slower the zoom.
Type: number
Default: 1.5
focusTargetThe type of the entity that receives focus on mouse hover. Also affects which entity is selected by mouse click, and which data table element is associated with events. Can be one of the following:
In focusTarget 'category' the tooltip displays all the category values. This may be useful for comparing values of different series.
Type: string
Default: 'datum'
fontSizeThe default font size, in pixels, of all text in the chart. You can override this using properties for specific chart elements.
Type: number
Default: automatic
fontNameThe default font face for all text in the chart. You can override this using properties for specific chart elements.
Type: string
Default: 'Arial'
forceIFrameDraws the chart inside an inline frame. (Note that on IE8, this option is ignored; all IE8 charts are drawn in i-frames.)
Type: boolean
Default: false
hAxisAn object with members to configure various horizontal axis elements. To specify properties of this object, you can use object literal notation, as shown here:
{ title: 'Hello', titleTextStyle: { color: '#FF0000' } }
Type: object
Default: null
hAxis.baselineThe baseline for the horizontal axis.
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: number
Default: automatic
hAxis.baselineColorThe color of the baseline for the horizontal axis. Can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
.
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: number
Default: 'black'
hAxis.directionThe direction in which the values along the horizontal axis grow. Specify -1
to reverse the order of the values.
Type: 1 or -1
Default: 1
hAxis.formatA format string for numeric or date axis labels.
For number axis labels, this is a subset of the decimal formatting ICU pattern set . For instance, {format:'#,###%'}
will display values "1,000%", "750%", and "50%" for values 10, 7.5, and 0.5. You can also supply any of the following:
{format: 'none'}
: displays numbers with no formatting (e.g., 8000000){format: 'decimal'}
: displays numbers with thousands separators (e.g., 8,000,000){format: 'scientific'}
: displays numbers in scientific notation (e.g., 8e6){format: 'currency'}
: displays numbers in the local currency (e.g., $8,000,000.00){format: 'percent'}
: displays numbers as percentages (e.g., 800,000,000%){format: 'short'}
: displays abbreviated numbers (e.g., 8M){format: 'long'}
: displays numbers as full words (e.g., 8 million)For date axis labels, this is a subset of the date formatting ICU pattern set . For instance, {format:'MMM d, y'}
will display the value "Jul 1, 2011" for the date of July first in 2011.
The actual formatting applied to the label is derived from the locale the API has been loaded with. For more details, see loading charts with a specific locale .
In computing tick values and gridlines, several alternative combinations of all the relevant gridline options will be considered and alternatives will be rejected if the formatted tick labels would be duplicated or overlap. So you can specify format:"#"
if you want to only show integer tick values, but be aware that if no alternative satisfies this condition, no gridlines or ticks will be shown.
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: string
Default: auto
hAxis.gridlinesAn object with properties to configure the gridlines on the horizontal axis. Note that horizontal axis gridlines are drawn vertically. To specify properties of this object, you can use object literal notation, as shown here:
{color: '#333', minSpacing: 20}
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: object
Default: null
hAxis.gridlines.colorThe color of the horizontal gridlines inside the chart area. Specify a valid HTML color string.
Type: string
Default: '#CCC'
hAxis.gridlines.countThe approximate number of horizontal gridlines inside the chart area. If you specify a positive number for gridlines.count
, it will be used to compute the minSpacing
between gridlines. You can specify a value of 1
to only draw one gridline, or 0
to draw no gridlines. Specify -1, which is the default, to automatically compute the number of gridlines based on other options.
Type: number
Default: -1
hAxis.gridlines.intervalAn array of sizes (as data values, not pixels) between adjacent gridlines. This option is only for numeric axes at this time, but it is analogous to the gridlines.units.<unit>.interval
options which are used only for dates and times. For linear scales, the default is [1, 2, 2.5, 5]
which means the gridline values can fall on every unit (1), on even units (2), or on multiples of 2.5 or 5. Any power of 10 times these values is also considered (e.g. [10, 20, 25, 50] and [.1, .2, .25, .5]). For log scales, the default is [1, 2, 5]
.
Type: number between 1 and 10, not including 10.
Default: computed
hAxis.gridlines.minSpacingThe minimum screen space, in pixels, between hAxis major gridlines. The default for major gridlines is 40
for linear scales, and 20
for log scales. If you specify the count
and not the minSpacing
, the minSpacing is computed from the count. And conversely, if you specify the minSpacing
and not the count
, the count is computed from the minSpacing. If you specify both, the minSpacing
overrides.
Type: number
Default: computed
hAxis.gridlines.multipleAll gridline and tick values must be a multiple of this option's value. Note that, unlike for intervals, powers of 10 times the multiple are not considered. So you can force ticks to be integers by specifying gridlines.multiple = 1
, or force ticks to be multiples of 1000 by specifying gridlines.multiple = 1000
.
Type: number
Default: 1
hAxis.gridlines.unitsOverrides the default format for various aspects of date/datetime/timeofday data types when used with chart computed gridlines. Allows formatting for years, months, days, hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds.
General format is:
gridlines: { units: { years: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, months: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, days: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} hours: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} minutes: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} seconds: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, milliseconds: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, } }
Additional information can be found in Dates and Times.
Type: object
Default: null
hAxis.minorGridlinesAn object with members to configure the minor gridlines on the horizontal axis, similar to the hAxis.gridlines option.
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: object
Default: null
hAxis.minorGridlines.colorThe color of the horizontal minor gridlines inside the chart area. Specify a valid HTML color string.
Type: string
Default: A blend of the gridline and background colors
hAxis.minorGridlines.countThe minorGridlines.count
option is mostly deprecated, except for disabling minor gridlines by setting the count to 0. The number of minor gridlines now depends entirely on the interval between major gridlines (see hAxis.gridlines.interval
) and the minimum required space (see hAxis.minorGridlines.minSpacing
).
Type: number
Default:1
hAxis.minorGridlines.intervalThe minorGridlines.interval option is like the major gridlines interval option, but the interval that is chosen will always be an even divisor of the major gridline interval. The default interval for linear scales is [1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 5]
, and for log scales is [1, 2, 5]
.
Type: number
Default:1
hAxis.minorGridlines.minSpacingThe minimum required space, in pixels, between adjacent minor gridlines, and between minor and major gridlines. The default value is 1/2 the minSpacing of major gridlines for linear scales, and 1/5 the minSpacing for log scales.
Type: number
Default:computed
hAxis.minorGridlines.multipleSame as for major gridlines.multiple
.
Type: number
Default: 1
hAxis.minorGridlines.unitsOverrides the default format for various aspects of date/datetime/timeofday data types when used with chart computed minorGridlines. Allows formatting for years, months, days, hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds.
General format is:
gridlines: { units: { years: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, months: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, days: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} hours: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} minutes: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} seconds: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, milliseconds: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, } }
Additional information can be found in Dates and Times.
Type: object
Default: null
hAxis.logScalehAxis
property that makes the horizontal axis a logarithmic scale (requires all values to be positive). Set to true for yes.
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: boolean
Default: false
hAxis.scaleTypehAxis
property that makes the horizontal axis a logarithmic scale. Can be one of the following:
hAxis: { logscale: true }
.This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: string
Default: null
hAxis.textPositionPosition of the horizontal axis text, relative to the chart area. Supported values: 'out', 'in', 'none'.
Type: string
Default: 'out'
hAxis.textStyleAn object that specifies the horizontal axis text style. The object has this format:
{ color: <string>, fontName: <string>, fontSize: <number>, bold: <boolean>, italic: <boolean> }
The color
can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
. Also see fontName
and fontSize
.
Type: object
Default: {color: 'black', fontName: <global-font-name>, fontSize: <global-font-size>}
Replaces the automatically generated X-axis ticks with the specified array. Each element of the array should be either a valid tick value (such as a number, date, datetime, or timeofday), or an object. If it's an object, it should have a v
property for the tick value, and an optional f
property containing the literal string to be displayed as the label.
The viewWindow will be automatically expanded to include the min and max ticks unless you specify a viewWindow.min
or viewWindow.max
to override.
Examples:
hAxis: { ticks: [5,10,15,20] }
hAxis: { ticks: [{v:32, f:'thirty two'}, {v:64, f:'sixty four'}] }
hAxis: { ticks: [new Date(2014,3,15), new Date(2013,5,15)] }
hAxis: { ticks: [16, {v:32, f:'thirty two'}, {v:64, f:'sixty four'}, 128] }
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: Array of elements
Default: auto
hAxis.titlehAxis
property that specifies the title of the horizontal axis.
Type: string
Default: null
hAxis.titleTextStyleAn object that specifies the horizontal axis title text style. The object has this format:
{ color: <string>, fontName: <string>, fontSize: <number>, bold: <boolean>, italic: <boolean> }
The color
can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
. Also see fontName
and fontSize
.
Type: object
Default: {color: 'black', fontName: <global-font-name>, fontSize: <global-font-size>}
If false, will hide outermost labels rather than allow them to be cropped by the chart container. If true, will allow label cropping.
This option is only supported for a discrete
axis.
Type: boolean
Default: false
hAxis.slantedTextIf true, draw the horizontal axis text at an angle, to help fit more text along the axis; if false, draw horizontal axis text upright. Default behavior is to slant text if it cannot all fit when drawn upright. Notice that this option is available only when the hAxis.textPosition
is set to 'out' (which is the default). The default is false
for dates and times.
Type: boolean
Default: automatic
hAxis.slantedTextAngleThe angle of the horizontal axis text, if it's drawn slanted. Ignored if hAxis.slantedText
is false
, or is in auto mode, and the chart decided to draw the text horizontally. If the angle is positive, the rotation is counter-clockwise, and if negative, it is clockwise.
Type: number, -90—90
Default: 30
hAxis.maxAlternationMaximum number of levels of horizontal axis text. If axis text labels become too crowded, the server might shift neighboring labels up or down in order to fit labels closer together. This value specifies the most number of levels to use; the server can use fewer levels, if labels can fit without overlapping. For dates and times, the default is 1.
Type: number
Default: 2
hAxis.maxTextLinesMaximum number of lines allowed for the text labels. Labels can span multiple lines if they are too long, and the number of lines is, by default, limited by the height of the available space.
Type: number
Default: auto
hAxis.minTextSpacingMinimum horizontal spacing, in pixels, allowed between two adjacent text labels. If the labels are spaced too densely, or they are too long, the spacing can drop below this threshold, and in this case one of the label-unclutter measures will be applied (e.g, truncating the labels or dropping some of them).
Type: number
Default: The value of hAxis.textStyle.fontSize
How many horizontal axis labels to show, where 1 means show every label, 2 means show every other label, and so on. Default is to try to show as many labels as possible without overlapping.
Type: number
Default: automatic
hAxis.maxValueMoves the max value of the horizontal axis to the specified value; this will be rightward in most charts. Ignored if this is set to a value smaller than the maximum x-value of the data. hAxis.viewWindow.max
overrides this property.
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: number
Default: automatic
hAxis.minValueMoves the min value of the horizontal axis to the specified value; this will be leftward in most charts. Ignored if this is set to a value greater than the minimum x-value of the data. hAxis.viewWindow.min
overrides this property.
This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: number
Default: automatic
hAxis.viewWindowModeSpecifies how to scale the horizontal axis to render the values within the chart area. The following string values are supported:
haxis.viewWindow.min
and haxis.viewWindow.max
to be ignored.haxis.viewWindow.min
and haxis.viewWindow.max
.) Data values outside these values will be cropped. You must specify an hAxis.viewWindow
object describing the maximum and minimum values to show.This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: string
Default: Equivalent to 'pretty', but haxis.viewWindow.min
and haxis.viewWindow.max
take precedence if used.
Specifies the cropping range of the horizontal axis.
Type: object
Default: null
hAxis.viewWindow.maxFor a continuous
axis:
The maximum horizontal data value to render.
For a discrete
axis:
The zero-based row index where the cropping window ends. Data points at this index and higher will be cropped out. In conjunction with vAxis.viewWindowMode.min
, it defines a half-opened range [min, max) that denotes the element indices to display. In other words, every index such that min <= index < max
will be displayed.
Ignored when hAxis.viewWindowMode
is 'pretty' or 'maximized'.
Type: number
Default: auto
hAxis.viewWindow.minFor a continuous
axis:
The minimum horizontal data value to render.
For a discrete
axis:
The zero-based row index where the cropping window begins. Data points at indices lower than this will be cropped out. In conjunction with vAxis.viewWindowMode.max
, it defines a half-opened range [min, max) that denotes the element indices to display. In other words, every index such that min <= index < max
will be displayed.
Ignored when hAxis.viewWindowMode
is 'pretty' or 'maximized'.
Type: number
Default: auto
heightHeight of the chart, in pixels.
Type: number
Default: height of the containing element
interpolateNullsWhether to guess the value of missing points. If true, it will guess the value of any missing data based on neighboring points. If false, it will leave a break in the line at the unknown point.
This is not supported by Area charts with the isStacked: true/'percent'/'relative'/'absolute'
option.
Type: boolean
Default: false
isStackedIf set to true, stacks the elements for all series at each domain value. Note: In Column, Area, and SteppedArea charts, Google Charts reverses the order of legend items to better correspond with the stacking of the series elements (E.g. series 0 will be the bottom-most legend item). This does not apply to Bar Charts.
The isStacked
option also supports 100% stacking, where the stacks of elements at each domain value are rescaled to add up to 100%.
The options for isStacked
are:
false
— elements will not stack. This is the default option.true
— stacks elements for all series at each domain value.'percent'
— stacks elements for all series at each domain value and rescales them such that they add up to 100%, with each element's value calculated as a percentage of 100%.'relative'
— stacks elements for all series at each domain value and rescales them such that they add up to 1, with each element's value calculated as a fraction of 1.'absolute'
— functions the same as isStacked: true
.For 100% stacking, the calculated value for each element will appear in the tooltip after its actual value.
The target axis will default to tick values based on the relative 0-1 scale as fractions of 1 for 'relative'
, and 0-100% for 'percent'
(Note: when using the 'percent'
option, the axis/tick values are displayed as percentages, however the actual values are the relative 0-1 scale values. This is because the percentage axis ticks are the result of applying a format of "#.##%" to the relative 0-1 scale values. When using isStacked: 'percent'
, be sure to specify any ticks/gridlines using the relative 0-1 scale values). You can customize the gridlines/tick values and formatting using the appropriate hAxis/vAxis
options.
100% stacking only supports data values of type number
, and must have a baseline of zero.
Type: boolean/string
Default: false
legendAn object with members to configure various aspects of the legend. To specify properties of this object, you can use object literal notation, as shown here:
{position: 'top', textStyle: {color: 'blue', fontSize: 16}}
Type: object
Default: null
legend.alignmentAlignment of the legend. Can be one of the following:
Start, center, and end are relative to the style -- vertical or horizontal -- of the legend. For example, in a 'right' legend, 'start' and 'end' are at the top and bottom, respectively; for a 'top' legend, 'start' and 'end' would be at the left and right of the area, respectively.
The default value depends on the legend's position. For 'bottom' legends, the default is 'center'; other legends default to 'start'.
Type: string
Default: automatic
legend.maxLinesMaximum number of lines in the legend. Set this to a number greater than one to add lines to your legend. Note: The exact logic used to determine the actual number of lines rendered is still in flux.
This option currently works only when legend.position is 'top'.
Type: number
Default: 1
legend.pageIndexInitial selected zero-based page index of the legend.
Type: number
Default: 0
legend.positionPosition of the legend. Can be one of the following:
targetAxisIndex: 1
.vAxes
option.Type: string
Default: 'right'
legend.textStyleAn object that specifies the legend text style. The object has this format:
{ color: <string>, fontName: <string>, fontSize: <number>, bold: <boolean>, italic: <boolean> }
The color
can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
. Also see fontName
and fontSize
.
Type: object
Default: {color: 'black', fontName: <global-font-name>, fontSize: <global-font-size>}
The on-and-off pattern for dashed lines. For instance, [4, 4]
will repeat 4-length dashes followed by 4-length gaps, and [5, 1, 3]
will repeat a 5-length dash, a 1-length gap, a 3-length dash, a 5-length gap, a 1-length dash, and a 3-length gap. See Dashed Lines for more information.
Type: Array of numbers
Default: null
lineWidthData line width in pixels. Use zero to hide all lines and show only the points. You can override values for individual series using the series
property.
Type: number
Default: 2
orientationThe orientation of the chart. When set to 'vertical'
, rotates the axes of the chart so that (for instance) a column chart becomes a bar chart, and an area chart grows rightward instead of up:
Type: string
Default: 'horizontal'
pointShapeThe shape of individual data elements: 'circle', 'triangle', 'square', 'diamond', 'star', or 'polygon'. See the points documentation for examples.
Type: string
Default: 'circle'
pointSizeDiameter of displayed points in pixels. Use zero to hide all points. You can override values for individual series using the series
property. If you're using a trendline, the pointSize
option will affect the width of the trendline unless you override it with the trendlines.n.pointsize
option.
Type: number
Default: 0
pointsVisibleDetermines whether points will be displayed. Set to false
to hide all points. You can override values for individual series using the series
property. If you're using a trendline, the pointsVisible
option will affect the visibility of the points on all trendlines unless you override it with the trendlines.n.pointsVisible
option.
This can also be overridden using the style role in the form of "point {visible: true}"
.
Type: boolean
Default: true
reverseCategoriesIf set to true, will draw series from right to left. The default is to draw left-to-right.
This option is only supported for a discrete
major
axis.
Type: boolean
Default: false
selectionModeWhen selectionMode
is 'multiple'
, users may select multiple data points.
Type: string
Default: 'single'
seriesAn array of objects, each describing the format of the corresponding series in the chart. To use default values for a series, specify an empty object {}. If a series or a value is not specified, the global value will be used. Each object supports the following properties:
annotations
- An object to be applied to annotations for this series. This can be used to control, for instance, the textStyle
for the series:
series: { 0: { annotations: { textStyle: {fontSize: 12, color: 'red' } } } }
See the various annotations
options for a more complete list of what can be customized.
areaOpacity
- Overrides the global areaOpacity
for this series.color
- The color to use for this series. Specify a valid HTML color string.labelInLegend
- The description of the series to appear in the chart legend.lineDashStyle
- Overrides the global lineDashStyle
value for this series.lineWidth
- Overrides the global lineWidth
value for this series.pointShape
- Overrides the global pointShape
value for this series.pointSize
- Overrides the global pointSize
value for this series.pointsVisible
- Overrides the global pointsVisible
value for this series.targetAxisIndex
- Which axis to assign this series to, where 0 is the default axis, and 1 is the opposite axis. Default value is 0; set to 1 to define a chart where different series are rendered against different axes. At least one series much be allocated to the default axis. You can define a different scale for different axes.visibleInLegend
- A boolean value, where true means that the series should have a legend entry, and false means that it should not. Default is true.You can specify either an array of objects, each of which applies to the series in the order given, or you can specify an object where each child has a numeric key indicating which series it applies to. For example, the following two declarations are identical, and declare the first series as black and absent from the legend, and the fourth as red and absent from the legend:
series: [ {color: 'black', visibleInLegend: false}, {}, {}, {color: 'red', visibleInLegend: false} ] series: { 0:{color: 'black', visibleInLegend: false}, 3:{color: 'red', visibleInLegend: false} }
Type: Array of objects, or object with nested objects
Default: {}
themeA theme is a set of predefined option values that work together to achieve a specific chart behavior or visual effect. Currently only one theme is available:
chartArea: {width: '100%', height: '100%'}, legend: {position: 'in'}, titlePosition: 'in', axisTitlesPosition: 'in', hAxis: {textPosition: 'in'}, vAxis: {textPosition: 'in'}
Type: string
Default: null
titleText to display above the chart.
Type: string
Default: no title
titlePositionWhere to place the chart title, compared to the chart area. Supported values:
Type: string
Default: 'out'
titleTextStyleAn object that specifies the title text style. The object has this format:
{ color: <string>, fontName: <string>, fontSize: <number>, bold: <boolean>, italic: <boolean> }
The color
can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
. Also see fontName
and fontSize
.
Type: object
Default: {color: 'black', fontName: <global-font-name>, fontSize: <global-font-size>}
An object with members to configure various tooltip elements. To specify properties of this object, you can use object literal notation, as shown here:
{textStyle: {color: '#FF0000'}, showColorCode: true}
Type: object
Default: null
tooltip.ignoreBoundsIf set to true
, allows the drawing of tooltips to flow outside of the bounds of the chart on all sides.
Note: This only applies to HTML tooltips. If this is enabled with SVG tooltips, any overflow outside of the chart bounds will be cropped. See Customizing Tooltip Content for more details.
Type: boolean
Default: false
tooltip.isHtmlIf set to true, use HTML-rendered (rather than SVG-rendered) tooltips. See Customizing Tooltip Content for more details.
Note: customization of the HTML tooltip content via the tooltip column data role is not supported by the Bubble Chart visualization.
Type: boolean
Default: false
tooltip.showColorCodeIf true, show colored squares next to the series information in the tooltip. The default is true when focusTarget
is set to 'category', otherwise the default is false.
Type: boolean
Default: automatic
tooltip.textStyleAn object that specifies the tooltip text style. The object has this format:
{ color: <string>, fontName: <string>, fontSize: <number>, bold: <boolean>, italic: <boolean> }
The color
can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
. Also see fontName
and fontSize
.
Type: object
Default: {color: 'black', fontName: <global-font-name>, fontSize: <global-font-size>}
The user interaction that causes the tooltip to be displayed:
Type: string
Default: 'focus'
vAxesSpecifies properties for individual vertical axes, if the chart has multiple vertical axes. Each child object is a vAxis
object, and can contain all the properties supported by vAxis
. These property values override any global settings for the same property.
To specify a chart with multiple vertical axes, first define a new axis using series.targetAxisIndex
, then configure the axis using vAxes
. The following example assigns series 2 to the right axis and specifies a custom title and text style for it:
{ series: { 2: { targetAxisIndex:1 } }, vAxes: { 1: { title:'Losses', textStyle: {color: 'red'} } } }
This property can be either an object or an array: the object is a collection of objects, each with a numeric label that specifies the axis that it defines--this is the format shown above; the array is an array of objects, one per axis. For example, the following array-style notation is identical to the vAxis
object shown above:
vAxes: [ {}, // Nothing specified for axis 0 { title:'Losses', textStyle: {color: 'red'} // Axis 1 } ]
Type: Array of object, or object with child objects
Default: null
vAxisAn object with members to configure various vertical axis elements. To specify properties of this object, you can use object literal notation, as shown here:
{title: 'Hello', titleTextStyle: {color: '#FF0000'}}
Type: object
Default: null
vAxis.baselinevAxis
property that specifies the baseline for the vertical axis. If the baseline is larger than the highest grid line or smaller than the lowest grid line, it will be rounded to the closest gridline.
Type: number
Default: automatic
vAxis.baselineColorSpecifies the color of the baseline for the vertical axis. Can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
.
Type: number
Default: 'black'
vAxis.directionThe direction in which the values along the vertical axis grow. By default, low values are on the bottom of the chart. Specify -1
to reverse the order of the values.
Type: 1 or -1
Default: 1
vAxis.formatA format string for numeric axis labels. This is a subset of the ICU pattern set . For instance, {format:'#,###%'}
will display values "1,000%", "750%", and "50%" for values 10, 7.5, and 0.5. You can also supply any of the following:
{format: 'none'}
: displays numbers with no formatting (e.g., 8000000){format: 'decimal'}
: displays numbers with thousands separators (e.g., 8,000,000){format: 'scientific'}
: displays numbers in scientific notation (e.g., 8e6){format: 'currency'}
: displays numbers in the local currency (e.g., $8,000,000.00){format: 'percent'}
: displays numbers as percentages (e.g., 800,000,000%){format: 'short'}
: displays abbreviated numbers (e.g., 8M){format: 'long'}
: displays numbers as full words (e.g., 8 million)The actual formatting applied to the label is derived from the locale the API has been loaded with. For more details, see loading charts with a specific locale .
In computing tick values and gridlines, several alternative combinations of all the relevant gridline options will be considered and alternatives will be rejected if the formatted tick labels would be duplicated or overlap. So you can specify format:"#"
if you want to only show integer tick values, but be aware that if no alternative satisfies this condition, no gridlines or ticks will be shown.
Type: string
Default: auto
vAxis.gridlinesAn object with members to configure the gridlines on the vertical axis. Note that vertical axis gridlines are drawn horizontally. To specify properties of this object, you can use object literal notation, as shown here:
{color: '#333', minSpacing: 20}
Type: object
Default: null
vAxis.gridlines.colorThe color of the vertical gridlines inside the chart area. Specify a valid HTML color string.
Type: string
Default: '#CCC'
vAxis.gridlines.countThe approximate number of horizontal gridlines inside the chart area. If you specify a positive number for gridlines.count
, it will be used to compute the minSpacing
between gridlines. You can specify a value of 1
to only draw one gridline, or 0
to draw no gridlines. Specify -1, which is the default, to automatically compute the number of gridlines based on other options.
Type: number
Default: -1
vAxis.gridlines.intervalAn array of sizes (as data values, not pixels) between adjacent gridlines. This option is only for numeric axes at this time, but it is analogous to the gridlines.units.<unit>.interval
options which are used only for dates and times. For linear scales, the default is [1, 2, 2.5, 5]
which means the gridline values can fall on every unit (1), on even units (2), or on multiples of 2.5 or 5. Any power of 10 times these values is also considered (e.g. [10, 20, 25, 50] and [.1, .2, .25, .5]). For log scales, the default is [1, 2, 5]
.
Type: number between 1 and 10, not including 10.
Default: computed
vAxis.gridlines.minSpacingThe minimum screen space, in pixels, between hAxis major gridlines. The default for major gridlines is 40
for linear scales, and 20
for log scales. If you specify the count
and not the minSpacing
, the minSpacing is computed from the count. And conversely, if you specify the minSpacing
and not the count
, the count is computed from the minSpacing. If you specify both, the minSpacing
overrides.
Type: number
Default: computed
vAxis.gridlines.multipleAll gridline and tick values must be a multiple of this option's value. Note that, unlike for intervals, powers of 10 times the multiple are not considered. So you can force ticks to be integers by specifying gridlines.multiple = 1
, or force ticks to be multiples of 1000 by specifying gridlines.multiple = 1000
.
Type: number
Default: 1
vAxis.gridlines.unitsOverrides the default format for various aspects of date/datetime/timeofday data types when used with chart computed gridlines. Allows formatting for years, months, days, hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds.
General format is:
gridlines: { units: { years: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, months: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, days: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, hours: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, minutes: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, seconds: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, milliseconds: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} } }
Additional information can be found in Dates and Times.
Type: object
Default: null
vAxis.minorGridlinesAn object with members to configure the minor gridlines on the vertical axis, similar to the vAxis.gridlines option.
Type: object
Default: null
vAxis.minorGridlines.colorThe color of the vertical minor gridlines inside the chart area. Specify a valid HTML color string.
Type: string
Default: A blend of the gridline and background colors
vAxis.minorGridlines.intervalThe minorGridlines.interval option is like the major gridlines interval option, but the interval that is chosen will always be an even divisor of the major gridline interval. The default interval for linear scales is [1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 5]
, and for log scales is [1, 2, 5]
.
Type: number
Default:1
vAxis.minorGridlines.minSpacingThe minimum required space, in pixels, between adjacent minor gridlines, and between minor and major gridlines. The default value is 1/2 the minSpacing of major gridlines for linear scales, and 1/5 the minSpacing for log scales.
Type: number
Default:computed
vAxis.minorGridlines.multipleSame as for major gridlines.multiple
.
Type: number
Default: 1
vAxis.minorGridlines.countThe minorGridlines.count option is mostly deprecated, except for disabling minor gridlines by setting the count to 0. The number of minor gridlines depends on the interval between major gridlines (see vAxis.gridlines.interval) and the minimum required space (see vAxis.minorGridlines.minSpacing).
Type: number
Default: 1
vAxis.minorGridlines.unitsOverrides the default format for various aspects of date/datetime/timeofday data types when used with chart computed minorGridlines. Allows formatting for years, months, days, hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds.
General format is:
gridlines: { units: { years: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, months: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, days: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} hours: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} minutes: {format: [/*format strings here*/]} seconds: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, milliseconds: {format: [/*format strings here*/]}, } }
Additional information can be found in Dates and Times.
Type: object
Default: null
vAxis.logScaleIf true, makes the vertical axis a logarithmic scale. Note: All values must be positive.
Type: boolean
Default: false
vAxis.scaleTypevAxis
property that makes the vertical axis a logarithmic scale. Can be one of the following:
vAxis: { logscale: true }
.This option is only supported for a continuous
axis.
Type: string
Default: null
vAxis.textPositionPosition of the vertical axis text, relative to the chart area. Supported values: 'out', 'in', 'none'.
Type: string
Default: 'out'
vAxis.textStyleAn object that specifies the vertical axis text style. The object has this format:
{ color: <string>, fontName: <string>, fontSize: <number>, bold: <boolean>, italic: <boolean> }
The color
can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
. Also see fontName
and fontSize
.
Type: object
Default: {color: 'black', fontName: <global-font-name>, fontSize: <global-font-size>}
Replaces the automatically generated Y-axis ticks with the specified array. Each element of the array should be either a valid tick value (such as a number, date, datetime, or timeofday), or an object. If it's an object, it should have a v
property for the tick value, and an optional f
property containing the literal string to be displayed as the label.
The viewWindow will be automatically expanded to include the min and max ticks unless you specify a viewWindow.min
or viewWindow.max
to override.
Examples:
vAxis: { ticks: [5,10,15,20] }
vAxis: { ticks: [{v:32, f:'thirty two'}, {v:64, f:'sixty four'}] }
vAxis: { ticks: [new Date(2014,3,15), new Date(2013,5,15)] }
vAxis: { ticks: [16, {v:32, f:'thirty two'}, {v:64, f:'sixty four'}, 128] }
Type: Array of elements
Default: auto
vAxis.titlevAxis
property that specifies a title for the vertical axis.
Type: string
Default: no title
vAxis.titleTextStyleAn object that specifies the vertical axis title text style. The object has this format:
{ color: <string>, fontName: <string>, fontSize: <number>, bold: <boolean>, italic: <boolean> }
The color
can be any HTML color string, for example: 'red'
or '#00cc00'
. Also see fontName
and fontSize
.
Type: object
Default: {color: 'black', fontName: <global-font-name>, fontSize: <global-font-size>}
Moves the max value of the vertical axis to the specified value; this will be upward in most charts. Ignored if this is set to a value smaller than the maximum y-value of the data. vAxis.viewWindow.max
overrides this property.
Type: number
Default: automatic
vAxis.minValueMoves the min value of the vertical axis to the specified value; this will be downward in most charts. Ignored if this is set to a value greater than the minimum y-value of the data. vAxis.viewWindow.min
overrides this property.
Type: number
Default: null
vAxis.viewWindowModeSpecifies how to scale the vertical axis to render the values within the chart area. The following string values are supported:
vaxis.viewWindow.min
and vaxis.viewWindow.max
to be ignored.vaxis.viewWindow.min
and vaxis.viewWindow.max
. Data values outside these values will be cropped. You must specify a vAxis.viewWindow
object describing the maximum and minimum values to show.Type: string
Default: Equivalent to 'pretty', but vaxis.viewWindow.min
and vaxis.viewWindow.max
take precedence if used.
Specifies the cropping range of the vertical axis.
Type: object
Default: null
vAxis.viewWindow.maxThe maximum vertical data value to render.
Ignored when vAxis.viewWindowMode
is 'pretty' or 'maximized'.
Type: number
Default: auto
vAxis.viewWindow.minThe minimum vertical data value to render.
Ignored when vAxis.viewWindowMode
is 'pretty' or 'maximized'.
Type: number
Default: auto
widthWidth of the chart, in pixels.
Type: number
Default: width of the containing element
Methods Methoddraw(data, options)
Draws the chart. The chart accepts further method calls only after the ready
event is fired. Extended description
.
Return Type: none
getAction(actionID)
Returns the tooltip action object with the requested actionID
.
Return Type: object
getBoundingBox(id)
Returns an object containing the left, top, width, and height of chart element id
. The format for id
isn't yet documented (they're the return values of event handlers), but here are some examples:
var cli = chart.getChartLayoutInterface();
- Height of the chart area
cli.getBoundingBox('chartarea').height
- Width of the third bar in the first series of a bar or column chart
cli.getBoundingBox('bar#0#2').width
- Bounding box of the fifth wedge of a pie chart
cli.getBoundingBox('slice#4')
- Bounding box of the chart data of a vertical (e.g., column) chart:
cli.getBoundingBox('vAxis#0#gridline')
- Bounding box of the chart data of a horizontal (e.g., bar) chart:
cli.getBoundingBox('hAxis#0#gridline')
Values are relative to the container of the chart. Call this after the chart is drawn.
Return Type: object
getChartAreaBoundingBox()
Returns an object containing the left, top, width, and height of the chart content (i.e., excluding labels and legend):
var cli = chart.getChartLayoutInterface();
cli.getChartAreaBoundingBox().left
cli.getChartAreaBoundingBox().top
cli.getChartAreaBoundingBox().height
cli.getChartAreaBoundingBox().width
Values are relative to the container of the chart. Call this after the chart is drawn.
Return Type: object
getChartLayoutInterface()
Returns an object containing information about the onscreen placement of the chart and its elements.
The following methods can be called on the returned object:
getBoundingBox
getChartAreaBoundingBox
getHAxisValue
getVAxisValue
getXLocation
getYLocation
Call this after the chart is drawn.
Return Type: object
getHAxisValue(xPosition, optional_axis_index)
Returns the horizontal data value at xPosition
, which is a pixel offset from the chart container's left edge. Can be negative.
Example: chart.getChartLayoutInterface().getHAxisValue(400)
.
Call this after the chart is drawn.
Return Type: number
getImageURI()
Returns the chart serialized as an image URI.
Call this after the chart is drawn.
See Printing PNG Charts.
Return Type: string
getSelection()
Returns an array of the selected chart entities. Selectable entities are points, annotations, legend entries and categories. A point or annotation corresponds to a cell in the data table, a legend entry to a column (row index is null), and a category to a row (column index is null). For this chart, only one entity can be selected at any given moment. Extended description
.
Return Type: Array of selection elements
getVAxisValue(yPosition, optional_axis_index)
Returns the vertical data value at yPosition
, which is a pixel offset down from the chart container's top edge. Can be negative.
Example: chart.getChartLayoutInterface().getVAxisValue(300)
.
Call this after the chart is drawn.
Return Type: number
getXLocation(dataValue, optional_axis_index)
Returns the pixel x-coordinate of dataValue
relative to the left edge of the chart's container.
Example: chart.getChartLayoutInterface().getXLocation(400)
.
Call this after the chart is drawn.
Return Type: number
getYLocation(dataValue, optional_axis_index)
Returns the pixel y-coordinate of dataValue
relative to the top edge of the chart's container.
Example: chart.getChartLayoutInterface().getYLocation(300)
.
Call this after the chart is drawn.
Return Type: number
removeAction(actionID)
Removes the tooltip action with the requested actionID
from the chart.
Return Type: none
setAction(action)
Sets a tooltip action to be executed when the user clicks on the action text.
The setAction
method takes an object as its action parameter. This object should specify 3 properties: id
— the ID of the action being set, text
—the text that should appear in the tooltip for the action, and action
— the function that should be run when a user clicks on the action text.
Any and all tooltip actions should be set prior to calling the chart's draw()
method. Extended description.
Return Type: none
setSelection()
Selects the specified chart entities. Cancels any previous selection. Selectable entities are points, annotations, legend entries and categories. A point or annotation corresponds to a cell in the data table, a legend entry to a column (row index is null), and a category to a row (column index is null). For this chart, only one entity can be selected at a time. Extended description
.
Return Type: none
clearChart()
Clears the chart, and releases all of its allocated resources.
Return Type: none
EventsFor more information on how to use these events, see Basic Interactivity, Handling Events, and Firing Events.
Nameanimationfinish
Fired when transition animation is complete.
Properties: none
click
Fired when the user clicks inside the chart. Can be used to identify when the title, data elements, legend entries, axes, gridlines, or labels are clicked.
Properties: targetID
error
Fired when an error occurs when attempting to render the chart.
Properties: id, message
legendpagination
Fired when the user clicks legend pagination arrows. Passes back the current legend zero-based page index and the total number of pages.
Properties: currentPageIndex, totalPages
onmouseover
Fired when the user mouses over a visual entity. Passes back the row and column indices of the corresponding data table element.
Properties: row, column
onmouseout
Fired when the user mouses away from a visual entity. Passes back the row and column indices of the corresponding data table element.
Properties: row, column
ready
The chart is ready for external method calls. If you want to interact with the chart, and call methods after you draw it, you should set up a listener for this event before you call the draw
method, and call them only after the event was fired.
Properties: none
select
Fired when the user clicks a visual entity. To learn what has been selected, call getSelection()
.
Properties: none
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Last updated 2024-07-10 UTC.
[[["Easy to understand","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Solved my problem","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Other","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Missing the information I need","missingTheInformationINeed","thumb-down"],["Too complicated / too many steps","tooComplicatedTooManySteps","thumb-down"],["Out of date","outOfDate","thumb-down"],["Samples / code issue","samplesCodeIssue","thumb-down"],["Other","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Last updated 2024-07-10 UTC."],[],[]]
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