"labels": ["Axis display"],
"type": "Array of two numbers",
"example": "[10, 110]",
- "description": "Explicitly set the vertical range of the graph to [low, high]."
+ "description": "Explicitly set the vertical range of the graph to [low, high]. This may be set on a per-axis basis to define each y-axis separately."
},
"labelsDivWidth": {
"default": "250",
"default": "null",
"description": "Text to display to the left of the chart's y-axis. You can supply any HTML for this value, not just text. If you wish to style it using CSS, use the 'dygraph-label' or 'dygraph-ylabel' classes. The text will be rotated 90 degrees by default, so CSS rules may behave in unintuitive ways. No additional space is set aside for a y-axis label. If you need more space, increase the width of the y-axis tick labels using the yAxisLabelWidth option. If you need a wider div for the y-axis label, either style it that way with CSS (but remember that it's rotated, so width is controlled by the 'height' property) or set the yLabelWidth option."
},
+ "y2label": {
+ "labels": ["Chart labels"],
+ "type": "string",
+ "default": "null",
+ "description": "Text to display to the right of the chart's secondary y-axis. This label is only displayed if a secondary y-axis is present. See <a href='http://dygraphs.com/tests/two-axes.html'>this test</a> for an example of how to do this. The comments for the 'ylabel' option generally apply here as well. This label gets a 'dygraph-y2label' instead of a 'dygraph-ylabel' class."
+ },
"yLabelWidth": {
"labels": ["Chart labels"],
"type": "integer",