This library aims to simplify integration with SigPlot by adding additional Typings, classes, enumerations, and interfaces to the existing basic Typings support. The library is distributed as ES5 and ES6 modules, making it useful for developers using other languages as well.
At this time, the two plot types are Line and (Falling) Raster. These correspond to Type 1000 and 2000 (1D and 2D, respectively). An abstract base class (BasePlot
) is also provided in the event your application needs other features.
Important: At this time, this library uses a fork of SigPlot that has basic typings support in the 2.0 development branch.
Install this library for your project using npm
:
npm install --save sigplot-ts
In your TypeScript environment, import and utilize the plot type of interest:
import {
RasterPlot,
RasterPlotData,
FormatSize,
FormatType
} from 'sigplot-ts';
// Somewhere in the application
let plot = new RasterPlot(dom_element);
// Then when data is received
const data: RasterPlotData = {
buffer: data_vector,
dataSize: FormatSize.Scalar,
dataType: FormatType.Float32
};
// Push the data
plot.push(data);
Important: Your HTML
dom_element
must have a non-zero height set, otherwise SigPlot will not be displayed at all. Once this is set, callcheckResize
on the plot instance to refresh the plot to the new dimensions.
The sigplot.Plot
interface supports a variety of options, some of which an only be set when the plot is created. The ConstructorOptions
class is provided to simplify that interface. Once the plot is instantiated, one can use the settings
member to access the runtime subset of those options and force an update using checkSettings
:
plot.settings.legend = false; // hide the legend
plot.checkSettings();
X and Y Axis Labels
The default construction options structure maps the X and Y label, via function, to the xlab
and ylab
members, which can be set to an enumeration (Units
, corresponding to sigplot.m.UNITS
). The default function uses the enumeration to produce a string value like Amplitude
. The base plot class exposes these two members directly in the event one would like to update the X and Y labels at runtime:
import { Units } from 'sigplot-ts';
// Somewhere below
this.plot.xlab = Units.Power; // Results in an X label of 'Power'
The relationship is that the enumeration name, as a string, becomes the corresponding label text (if shown).
If you find that the interfaces exposed by your selected sigplot-ts
plot do not expose the feature you want, you can access the underlying sigplot.Plot
instance at the class's _plot
member.
Such usage is discouraged, and users interested in doing so are encouraged to see SigPlot for more information since those interface and configuration descriptions are not maintained in this library.