X-Git-Url: https://adrianiainlam.tk/git/?a=blobdiff_plain;ds=sidebyside;f=docs%2Findex.html;h=59ac6ad587eacc0a1dbaa0f0c317a1427ff7db71;hb=780a5081d29a3c0a3c4f1d126f0992cf4fc14ebd;hp=1366f9d9fac1f5d345900f4654e0ffa1380f737d;hpb=52e5492a368655b00931f85215fc9558a21d9226;p=dygraphs.git diff --git a/docs/index.html b/docs/index.html index 1366f9d..59ac6ad 100644 --- a/docs/index.html +++ b/docs/index.html @@ -1,406 +1,700 @@ +
-dygraphs JavaScript Library
- code.google.com/p/dygraphs
The dygraphs JavaScript library produces produces interactive, zoomable charts of time series based on CSV files.
- -- - | - - | -
dygraphs allows the user to explore the data and discover these facts.
-For more demos, browse the dygraph tests + directory. To see other people who are using dygraphs, check out the known users.
-The DateGraph library depends on two other JS libraries: MochiKit and PlotKit. Rather than tracking down copies of these libraries, I recommend using a packed version of dygraphs that combines all three libraries into a single JS file. Either grab this file from dygraph project's downloads page or create it yourself by checking out a copy of the code and running: +
Some of the features of dygraphs:
+./generate-combined.sh+
The combined JS file is now in dygraph-combined.js
. Here's a basic example to get things started:
To use dygraphs, include the dygraph-combined.js
JavaScript file and instantiate a Dygraph
object.
HTML | -- | Output |
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+ | - - - |
HTML | -- | Output |
---|---|---|
+ | - - - |
Click here to view the temperatures.csv
file. There are a few things to note here:
null
, the labels were taken from the first line of the data instead. The first line of temperatures.csv
is Date,High,Low
.These last two problems can be fixed by specifying the appropriate options in the fourth parameter to the DateGraph constructor. To set the number of days for a moving average, use the rollPeriod option. To set the range of the y-axis, use the valueRange option. Here's how it's done:
- -HTML | -- | Output |
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+ + +
This problem can be fixed by specifying the appropriate options in the "additional options" parameter to the Dygraph constructor. To set the number of days for a moving average, use the
+
+ HTML+
+ | - - - |
A rolling average can be set using the text box in the lower left-hand corner of the graph (the showRoller attribute is what makes this appear). Also note that we've explicitly set the size of the chart div.
-A rolling average can always be set using the text box in the lower left-hand corner of the graph.
+Another significant feature of the dygraphs library is the ability to display error bars around data series. One standard deviation must be specified for each data point. A +/-n sigma band will be drawn around the data series at that point. If a moving average is being displayed, DateGraph will compute the standard deviation of the average at each point. (i.e. σ = sqrt((σ_1^2 + σ_2^2 + ... + σ_n^2)/n))
+Another significant feature of the dygraphs library is the ability to display error bars around data series. One standard deviation must be specified for each data point. A ±n sigma band will be drawn around the data series at that point. If a moving average is being displayed, dygraphs will compute the standard deviation of the average at each point. I.E. σ = sqrt( (σ12 + σ22 + ... + σn2) / n )
-Here's a demonstration. There are two data series. One is N(100,10)
with a standard deviation of 10 specified at each point. The other is N(80,20)
with a standard deviation of 20 specified at each point. The CSV file was generated using Octave and can be viewed here.
Here's a demonstration. There are two data series. One is N(100,10)
with a standard deviation of 10 specified at each point. The other is N(80,20)
with a standard deviation of 20 specified at each point. The CSV file was generated using Octave and can be viewed at twonormals.csv.
HTML | -- | Output |
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+ | - - - |
Things to note here:
-These are the options that can be passed in through the fourth parameter of the DateGraph constructor.
- -Name | Sample Value | Description |
---|---|---|
rollPeriod | -7 |
- Number of days over which to average data. Discussed extensively above. | -
colors | -['red', '#00FF00'] |
- List of colors for the data series. These can be of the form "#AABBCC" - or "rgb(255,100,200)" or "yellow", etc. If not specified, equally-spaced - points around a color wheel are used. | -
colorSaturation | -1.0 |
- If colors is not specified, saturation of the - automatically-generated data series colors. (0.0-1.0, default: - 1.0) | -
colorValue | -0.5 |
- If colors is not specified, value of the data series colors, as in - hue/saturation/value. (0.0-1.0, default 0.5) | -
clickCallback | -function(e,date){ alert(date); } |
- A function to call when a data point is clicked. The function should take - two arguments, the event object for the click and the date that was - clicked. (default null) | -
errorBars | -false |
- Does the data contain standard deviations? Setting this to true alters - the input format (see above). (default false) | -
strokeWidth | -2.0 |
- Width of the data lines. This can be used to increase the contrast or - some graphs. (default 1.0) | -
dateWindow | -[(new Date('2006-01-01')).valueOf(), |
- Initially zoom in on a section of the graph. Is of the form [earliest, - latest], where earliest/latest are millis since epoch. By default, the - full range of the input is shown. | -
valueRange | -[10, 110] |
- Explicitly set the vertical range of the graph to [low, high]. By - default, some clever heuristics are used (see above). | -
minTickSize | -1
- | The difference between ticks on the y-axis can be greater than or equal - to this, but no less. If you set it to 1, for instance, you'll never get - nonintegral gaps between ticks. | -
labelsSeparateLines | -true |
- Put <br/> between lines in the label string. Often used in - conjunction with labelsDiv. (default false) | -
labelsDiv | -document.getElementById('foo') |
- Show data labels in an external div, rather than on the graph. (default - null) | -
labelsKMB | -true |
- Show K/M/B for thousands/millions/billions on y-axis (default - false). | -
padding | -{left: 40, right: 30, |
- Adds extra pixels of padding around the graph. Sometimes a dygraph - gets clipped by surrounding text (see the Demo at the top of this page). - Setting this property appropriately will fix this problem. | -
Any options you specify also get passed on to PlotKit's Renderer class. DateGraph will override some of these (e.g. strokeColor), but others may be useful. The padding
property is an example of this.
Here are a few problems that I've frequently run into while using the -dygraphs library.
- -YYYYMMDD,series1,series2,...
. If you're specifying the
- names of each data series in the CSV file itself, make sure that you pass
- null
as the third parameter to the DateGraph constructor to let
- the library know that. And if you set the errorBars
property,
- make sure you alternate data series and standard deviations.<center>
- tag. This applies to the CSS text-align
property as well. If you
- want to center a DateGraph, put it inside a table with "align=center"
- set.colors
property or name the data series
- using the third parameter of the DateGraph constructor, make sure the number
- of data series agree in all places: colors
, third parameter and
- in each line of the CSV file itself.dateWindow
property to a date. It expects
- milliseconds since epoch, which can be obtained from a JavaScript Date
- object's valueOf method.Created May 9, 2008 by Dan Vanderkam
+ + +Things to note here:
+ +The dygraphs library relies heavily on the HTML5 <canvas>
tag, which Microsoft Internet Explorer did not traditionally support. To use Microsoft's native canvas implementation in IE9, you need to set an HTML5 doctype on your page:
+<!DOCTYPE html> ++ +
When IE9 is in HTML5 mode, dygraphs works just like in other modern browsers.
+ +If you want to support previous versions of Internet Explorer (IE6–IE8), you'll need to include the excanvas library, which emulates the <canvas>
tag using VML. You can add excanvas by including the following snippet:
+<!DOCTYPE html> +<html> + <head> + <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=EmulateIE7; IE=EmulateIE9"> + <!--[if IE]><script src="path/to/excanvas.js"></script><![endif]--> + </head> ++ +
(This is surprisingly tricky because the HTML5 doctype breaks excanvas in IE8. See this discussion for details.)
+ +While VML emulation sounds like it would be slow, it works well in practice for most charts.
+ +One common gotcha to look out for: make sure you don't have any trailing commas in parameter lists, e.g.
+ ++new Dygraph(el, data, { + showRoller: true, // note trailing comma +})+ +
Most browsers will ignore the trailing comma, but it will break under IE.
+ +The Google + Visualization API provides a standard interface for describing data. + Once you've specified your data using this API, you can plug in any + GViz-compatible visualization. dygraphs is such a visualization. In + particular, it can be used as a drop-in replacement for the + AnnotatedTimeline visualization used on Google Finance and other sites. To + see how this works, check out the gviz + annotation demo.
+ +For a simple demonstration of how to use dygraphs a GViz visualization, see http://danvk.org/dygraphs/tests/gviz.html. dygraphs can also be used as a GViz gadget. This allows it to be embedded inside of a Google Spreadsheet. For a demonstration of this, see this spreadsheet. The URL for the gadget is http://danvk.org/dygraphs/gadget.xml
.
Here's an example of a published gviz gadget using dygraphs:
+ + + +Situations often arise where you want to plot fractions, e.g. the fraction of respondents in a poll who said they'd vote for candidate X or the number of hits divided by at bats (baseball's batting average). Fractions require special treatment for two main reasons:
+ +a1/b1
and a2/b2
is (a1+a2)/(b1+b2)
, not (a1/b1 + a2/b2)/2
.Fortunately, dygraphs handles both of these for you! Here's a chart and the command that generated it:
+ +Command:
++ new Dygraph( + document.getElementById("baseballdiv"), + "suzuki-mariners.txt", + { + fractions: true, + errorBars: true, + showRoller: true, + rollPeriod: 15 + } + ); ++ +
The fractions
option indicates that the values in each column should be parsed as fractions (e.g. "1/2" instead of "0.5"). The errorBars
option indicates that we'd like to see a confidence interval around each data point. By default, when fractions
is set, you get a Wilson confidence interval. If you look carefully at the chart, you can see that the error bars are asymmetric.
A couple things to notice about this chart:
+ +This chart shows monthly closes of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, both in nominal and real (i.e. adjusted for inflation) dollars. The shaded areas show its monthly high and low. CPI values with a base from 1982-84 are used to adjust for inflation.
+ + +Display: + + + + + + +
+ + + + +In addition to the options mentioned above (showRoller
, rollPeriod
, errorBars
, valueRange
), there are many others.
For a full list, see the Dygraphs Options Reference page.
+ +Here are a few problems that I've frequently run into while using the dygraphs library.
+ +YYYYMMDD, series1, series2,
… . And if you set the errorBars
property, make sure you alternate data series and standard deviations.<center>
tag. This applies to the CSS text-align
property as well. If you want to center a Dygraph, put it inside a table with align = center
set.dateWindow
property to a date. It expects milliseconds since epoch, which can be obtained from a JavaScript Date object's valueOf method.There is currently no GWT wrapper around Dygraphs, however there is a class that can be used to easily load Dygraphs into the browser. To use it, include the generated dygraph-gwt.jar file in your classpath and add the following line to your GWT module:
+ ++<inherits name="org.danvk.dygraphs"/> ++ +
Call org.danvk.Dygraphs.install() when your application starts to install the JavaScript code into the browser. You can use JSNI to call Dygraphs from your GWT code, as in the example below. The example uses the Visualization API for GWT and the Dygraphs GViz API.
+ ++public static native JavaScriptObject drawDygraph( + Element element, DataTable dataTable, double minY, double maxY) /*-{ + var chart = new $wnd.Dygraph.GVizChart(element); + chart.draw(dataTable, + { + valueRange: [minY, maxY] + }); + return chart; +}-*/; ++ + +
Since its public release in late 2009, dygraphs has found many users + across the web. This is a small collection of the uses that we know about. + If you're using dygraphs, please send Dan a link and he'll add it to this + list.
+ +dygraphs was originally developed at Google and has found wide use on + internal dashboards and servers there. There are also a few uses of + dygraphs on public Google products:
+ +dygraphs has also found use in other organizations:
+ +Are you using dygraphs? Please let Dan know and he'll add your link here!
+ + +dygraphs is purely client-side JavaScript. It does not send your data to any servers – the data is processed entirely in the client's browser.
+ +Created May 9, 2008 by Dan Vanderkam
+