React wrapper for Chart.js 2 Open for PRs and contributions!
As of 2.x we have made chart.js a peer dependency for greater flexibility. Please add chart.js as a dependency on your project to use 2.x. Currently, 2.4.x is the recommended version of chart.js to use.
Actively looking for contributors as for the moment I do not have enough time to dedicate for maintaining this lib. All contributors can add themselves to Contributors section at the bottom of README.
Live demo: gor181.github.io/react-chartjs-2
To build the examples locally, run:
npm install
npm start
Then open localhost:8000
in a browser.
We have to build the package, then you can run storybook.
npm run build
npm run storybook
Then open localhost:6006
in a browser.
npm install react-chartjs-2 chart.js --save
Check example/src/components/* for usage.
import {Doughnut} from 'react-chartjs-2';
<Doughnut data={...} />
- data: (PropTypes.object | PropTypes.func).isRequired,
- width: PropTypes.number,
- height: PropTypes.number,
- legend: PropTypes.object,
- options: PropTypes.object,
- redraw: PropTypes.bool,
- getDatasetAtEvent: PropTypes.func,
- getElementAtEvent: PropTypes.func,
- getElementsAtEvent: PropTypes.func
- onElementsClick: PropTypes.func, // alias for getElementsAtEvent (backward compatibility)
In order for Chart.js to obey the custom size you need to set maintainAspectRatio
to false, example:
<Bar
data={data}
width={100}
height={50}
options={{
maintainAspectRatio: false
}}
/>
Chart.js instance can be accessed by placing a ref to the element as:
render() {
componentDidMount() {
console.log(this.refs.chart.chart_instance); // returns a Chart.js instance reference
}
return (
<Doughnut ref='chart' data={data} />
)
}
Canvas node and hence context, that can be used to create CanvasGradient background, is passed as argument to data if given as function:
This approach is useful when you want to keep your components pure.
render() {
const data = (canvas) => {
const ctx = canvas.getContext("2d")
const gradient = ctx.createLinearGradient(0,0,100,0);
...
return {
...
backgroundColor: gradient
...
}
}
return (
<Line data={data} />
)
}
Chart.js defaults can be set by importing the defaults
object:
import { defaults } from 'react-chartjs-2';
// Disable animating charts by default.
defaults.global.animation = false;
If you want to bulk set properties, try using the lodash.merge function. This function will do a deep recursive merge preserving previously set values that you don't want to update.
import { defaults } from 'react-chartjs-2';
import merge from 'lodash.merge';
// or
// import { merge } from 'lodash';
merge(defaults, {
global: {
animation: false,
line: {
borderColor: '#F85F73',
},
},
});
You can access the internal Chart.js object to register plugins or extend charts like this:
import { Chart } from 'react-chartjs-2';
componentWillMount() {
Chart.pluginService.register({
afterDraw: function (chart, easing) {
// Plugin code.
}
});
}
A function to be called when mouse clicked on chart elememts, will return all element at that point as an array. Check
{
onElementsClick: (elems) => {},
getElementsAtEvent: (elems) => {},
// `elems` is an array of chartElements
}
Calling getElementAtEvent(event) on your Chart instance passing an argument of an event, or jQuery event, will return the single element at the event position. If there are multiple items within range, only the first is returned Check
{
getElementAtEvent: (elems) => {},
// => returns the first element at the event point.
}
Looks for the element under the event point, then returns all elements from that dataset. This is used internally for 'dataset' mode highlighting Check
{
getDatasetAtEvent: (dataset) => {}
// `dataset` is an array of chartElements
}
NOTE: The source code for the component is in src
. A transpiled CommonJS version (generated with Babel) is available in lib
for use with node.js, browserify and webpack. A UMD bundle is also built to dist
, which can be included without the need for any build system.
To build, watch and serve the examples (which will also watch the component source), run npm start
. If you just want to watch changes to src
and rebuild lib
, run npm run watch
(this is useful if you are working with npm link
).
Jed Watson for making react-component yo builder!
MIT Licensed Copyright (c) 2016 Goran Udosic
Jeremy Ayerst @jerairrest