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@patternfly/react-charts

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This library provides a set of React chart components for use with the PatternFly reference implementation.

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/// <reference types="react" /> import { AnimatePropTypeInterface, CategoryPropType, D3Scale, DataGetterPropType, DomainPropType, DomainPaddingPropType, EventCallbackInterface, EventPropTypeInterface, OriginType, PaddingProps, RangePropType, ScalePropType, SortOrderPropType, StringOrNumberOrCallback, StringOrNumberOrList, VictoryStyleInterface } from 'victory-core'; import { VictoryGroupProps, VictoryGroupTTargetType } from 'victory-group'; import { ChartThemeDefinition } from '../ChartTheme/ChartTheme'; /** * ChartGroup is a wrapper component that renders a given set of children with some shared props. ChartGroup reconciles * the domain and layout for all its children, and coordinates animations and shared events. ChartGroup may also be used * to supply common data and styles to all its children. This is especially useful when adding markers to a line, or * adding voronoi tooltips to data. ChartGroup may also be used to apply an offset to a group of children, as with * grouped bar charts, or may be used to stack several components on the same level, e.g., stacked area charts with * data markers. * * See https://github.com/FormidableLabs/victory/blob/main/packages/victory-group/src/index.d.ts */ export interface ChartGroupProps extends VictoryGroupProps { /** * The animate prop specifies props for VictoryAnimation to use. * The animate prop should also be used to specify enter and exit * transition configurations with the `onExit` and `onEnter` namespaces respectively. * * @propType boolean | object * @example * {duration: 500, onExit: () => {}, onEnter: {duration: 500, before: () => ({y: 0})})} */ animate?: boolean | AnimatePropTypeInterface; /** * The ariaDesc prop specifies the description of the chart/SVG to assist with * accessibility for screen readers. * * Note: Overridden by the desc prop of containerComponent */ ariaDesc?: string; /** * The ariaTitle prop specifies the title to be applied to the SVG to assist * accessibility for screen readers. * * Note: Overridden by the title prop of containerComponent */ ariaTitle?: string; /** * The categories prop specifies how categorical data for a chart should be ordered. * This prop should be given as an array of string values, or an object with * these arrays of values specified for x and y. If this prop is not set, * categorical data will be plotted in the order it was given in the data array * * @propType string[] | { x: string[], y: string[] } * @example ["dogs", "cats", "mice"] */ categories?: CategoryPropType; /** * The children to render with the chart */ children?: React.ReactNode | React.ReactNode[]; /** * The color prop is an optional prop that defines a single color to be applied to the * children of ChartGroup. The color prop will override colors specified via colorScale. */ color?: string; /** * The colorScale prop is an optional prop that defines the color scale the chart's bars * will be created on. This prop should be given as an array of CSS colors, or as a string * corresponding to one of the built in color scales. ChartGroup will automatically assign * values from this color scale to the bars unless colors are explicitly provided in the * `dataAttributes` prop. */ colorScale?: string[]; /** * The containerComponent prop takes an entire component which will be used to * create a container element for standalone charts. * The new element created from the passed containerComponent wil be provided with * these props from ChartGroup: height, width, children * (the chart itself) and style. Props that are not provided by the * child chart component include title and desc, both of which * are intended to add accessibility to Victory components. The more descriptive these props * are, the more accessible your data will be for people using screen readers. * Any of these props may be overridden by passing in props to the supplied component, * or modified or ignored within the custom component itself. If a dataComponent is * not provided, ChartGroup will use the default ChartContainer component. * * @example <ChartContainer title="Chart of Dog Breeds" desc="This chart shows..." /> */ containerComponent?: React.ReactElement<any>; /** * The data prop specifies the data to be plotted. Data should be in the form of an array * of data points, or an array of arrays of data points for multiple datasets. * Each data point may be any format you wish (depending on the `x` and `y` accessor props), * but by default, an object with x and y properties is expected. * * @example [{x: 1, y: 2}, {x: 2, y: 3}], [[1, 2], [2, 3]], * [[{x: "a", y: 1}, {x: "b", y: 2}], [{x: "a", y: 2}, {x: "b", y: 3}]] */ data?: any[]; /** * The domain prop describes the range of values your chart will cover. This prop can be * given as a array of the minimum and maximum expected values for your bar chart, * or as an object that specifies separate arrays for x and y. * If this prop is not provided, a domain will be calculated from data, or other * available information. * * @propType number[] | { x: number[], y: number[] } * @example [low, high], { x: [low, high], y: [low, high] } * * [-1, 1], {x: [0, 100], y: [0, 1]} */ domain?: DomainPropType; /** * The domainPadding prop specifies a number of pixels of padding to add to the * beginning and end of a domain. This prop is useful for explicitly spacing ticks farther * from the origin to prevent crowding. This prop should be given as an object with * numbers specified for x and y. * * @propType number | number[] | { x: number[], y: number[] } * @example [left, right], { x: [left, right], y: [bottom, top] } * * {x: [10, -10], y: 5} */ domainPadding?: DomainPaddingPropType; /** * Similar to data accessor props `x` and `y`, this prop may be used to functionally * assign eventKeys to data * * @propType number | string | Function */ eventKey?: StringOrNumberOrCallback; /** * The event prop take an array of event objects. Event objects are composed of * a target, an eventKey, and eventHandlers. Targets may be any valid style namespace * for a given component, so "data" and "labels" are all valid targets for ChartGroup events. * Since ChartGroup only renders a single element, the eventKey property is not used. * The eventHandlers object should be given as an object whose keys are standard * event names (i.e. onClick) and whose values are event callbacks. The return value * of an event handler is used to modify elements. The return value should be given * as an object or an array of objects with optional target and eventKey keys, * and a mutation key whose value is a function. The target and eventKey keys * will default to those corresponding to the element the event handler was attached to. * The mutation function will be called with the calculated props for the individual selected * element (i.e. an area), and the object returned from the mutation function * will override the props of the selected element via object assignment. * * @propType object[] * @example * events={[ * { * target: "data", * eventHandlers: { * onClick: () => { * return [ * { * mutation: (props) => { * return {style: merge({}, props.style, {fill: "orange"})}; * } * }, { * target: "labels", * mutation: () => { * return {text: "hey"}; * } * } * ]; * } * } * } * ]} */ events?: EventPropTypeInterface<VictoryGroupTTargetType, StringOrNumberOrCallback>[]; /** * ChartGroup uses the standard externalEventMutations prop. * * @propType object[] */ externalEventMutations?: EventCallbackInterface<string | string[], StringOrNumberOrList>[]; /** * The groupComponent prop takes an entire component which will be used to * create group elements for use within container elements. This prop defaults * to a <g> tag on web, and a react-native-svg <G> tag on mobile */ groupComponent?: React.ReactElement<any>; /** * The hasPatterns prop is an optional prop that indicates whether a pattern is shown for a chart. * SVG patterns are dynamically generated (unique to each chart) in order to apply colors from the selected * color theme or custom color scale. Those generated patterns are applied in a specific order (via a URL), similar * to the color theme ordering defined by PatternFly. If the multi-color theme was in use; for example, colorized * patterns would be displayed in that same order. Create custom patterns via the patternScale prop. * * Note: Not all components are supported; for example, ChartLine, ChartBullet, ChartThreshold, etc. * * @example hasPatterns={ true } * @example hasPatterns={[ true, true, false ]} */ hasPatterns?: boolean | boolean[]; /** * The height props specifies the height the svg viewBox of the chart container. * This value should be given as a number of pixels */ height?: number; /** * The horizontal prop determines whether data will be plotted horizontally. * When this prop is set to true, the independent variable will be plotted on the y axis * and the dependent variable will be plotted on the x axis. */ horizontal?: boolean; /** * The labelComponent prop takes in an entire label component which will be used * to create a label for the area. The new element created from the passed labelComponent * will be supplied with the following properties: x, y, index, data, verticalAnchor, * textAnchor, angle, style, text, and events. any of these props may be overridden * by passing in props to the supplied component, or modified or ignored within * the custom component itself. If labelComponent is omitted, a new ChartLabel * will be created with props described above. This labelComponent prop should be used to * provide a series label for ChartGroup. If individual labels are required for each * data point, they should be created by composing ChartGroup with VictoryScatter */ labelComponent?: React.ReactElement<any>; /** * The labels prop defines labels that will appear above each bar in your chart. * This prop should be given as an array of values or as a function of data. * If given as an array, the number of elements in the array should be equal to * the length of the data array. Labels may also be added directly to the data object * like data={[{x: 1, y: 1, label: "first"}]}. * * @example ["spring", "summer", "fall", "winter"], (datum) => datum.title */ labels?: string[] | number[] | ((data: any) => string | number | null); /** * The maxDomain prop defines a maximum domain value for a chart. This prop is useful in situations where the maximum * domain of a chart is static, while the minimum value depends on data or other variable information. If the domain * prop is set in addition to maximumDomain, domain will be used. * * Note: The x value supplied to the maxDomain prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the * dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will corresponds to * the y axis. * * @example * * maxDomain={0} * maxDomain={{ y: 0 }} */ maxDomain?: number | { x?: number; y?: number; }; /** * The minDomain prop defines a minimum domain value for a chart. This prop is useful in situations where the minimum * domain of a chart is static, while the maximum value depends on data or other variable information. If the domain * prop is set in addition to minimumDomain, domain will be used. * * Note: The x value supplied to the minDomain prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the * dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will corresponds to * the y axis. * * @example * * minDomain={0} * minDomain={{ y: 0 }} */ minDomain?: number | { x?: number; y?: number; }; /** * The name prop is used to reference a component instance when defining shared events. */ name?: string; /** * The offset prop determines the number of pixels each element in a group should * be offset from its original position of the on the independent axis. In the * case of groups of bars, this number should be equal to the width of the bar * plus the desired spacing between bars. */ offset?: number; /** * Victory components will pass an origin prop is to define the center point in svg coordinates for polar charts. * * Note: It will not typically be necessary to set an origin prop manually * * @propType { x: number, y: number } */ origin?: OriginType; /** * The padding props specifies the amount of padding in number of pixels between * the edge of the chart and any rendered child components. This prop can be given * as a number or as an object with padding specified for top, bottom, left * and right. * * @propType number | { top: number, bottom: number, left: number, right: number } */ padding?: PaddingProps; /** * The patternScale prop is an optional prop that defines patterns to apply, where applicable. This prop should be * given as a string array of pattern URLs. Patterns will be assigned to children by index and will repeat when there * are more children than patterns in the provided patternScale. Use null to omit the pattern for a given index. * * Note: Not all components are supported; for example, ChartLine, ChartBullet, ChartThreshold, etc. * * @example patternScale={[ 'url("#pattern1")', 'url("#pattern2")', null ]} */ patternScale?: string[]; /** * Victory components can pass a boolean polar prop to specify whether a label is part of a polar chart. */ polar?: boolean; /** * The range prop describes the dimensions over which data may be plotted. For cartesian coordinate systems, this * corresponds to minimum and maximum svg coordinates in the x and y dimension. In polar coordinate systems this * corresponds to a range of angles and radii. When this value is not given it will be calculated from the width, * height, and padding, or from the startAngle and endAngle in the case of polar charts. All components in a given * chart must share the same range, so setting this prop on children nested within Chart, * ChartGroup will have no effect. This prop is usually not set manually. * * @propType number[] | { x: number[], y: number[] } * @example [low, high] | { x: [low, high], y: [low, high] } * * Cartesian: range={{ x: [50, 250], y: [50, 250] }} * Polar: range={{ x: [0, 360], y: [0, 250] }} */ range?: RangePropType; /** * The samples prop specifies how many individual points to plot when plotting * y as a function of x. Samples is ignored if x props are provided instead. */ samples?: number; /** * The scale prop determines which scales your chart should use. This prop can be * given as a string specifying a supported scale ("linear", "time", "log", "sqrt"), * as a d3 scale function, or as an object with scales specified for x and y * * @propType string | { x: string, y: string } * @example d3Scale.time(), {x: "linear", y: "log"} */ scale?: ScalePropType | D3Scale | { x?: ScalePropType | D3Scale; y?: ScalePropType | D3Scale; }; /** * The sharedEvents prop is used internally to coordinate events between components. * * Note: This prop should not be set manually. * * @private Not intended as public API and subject to change * @hide */ sharedEvents?: { events: any[]; getEventState: Function; }; /** * By default domainPadding is coerced to existing quadrants. This means that if a given domain only includes positive * values, no amount of padding applied by domainPadding will result in a domain with negative values. This is the * desired behavior in most cases. For users that need to apply padding without regard to quadrant, the * singleQuadrantDomainPadding prop may be used. This prop may be given as a boolean or an object with boolean values * specified for "x" and/or "y". When this prop is false (or false for a given dimension), padding will be applied * without regard to quadrant. If this prop is not specified, domainPadding will be coerced to existing quadrants. * * Note: The x value supplied to the singleQuadrantDomainPadding prop refers to the independent variable, and the y * value refers to the dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable * will corresponds to the y axis. * * @example * * singleQuadrantDomainPadding={false} * singleQuadrantDomainPadding={{ x: false }} */ singleQuadrantDomainPadding?: boolean | { x?: boolean; y?: boolean; }; /** * Use the sortKey prop to indicate how data should be sorted. This prop * is given directly to the lodash sortBy function to be executed on the * final dataset. * * @propType number | string | Function | string[] */ sortKey?: DataGetterPropType; /** * The sortOrder prop specifies whether sorted data should be returned in 'ascending' or 'descending' order. * * @propType string */ sortOrder?: SortOrderPropType; /** * The standalone prop determines whether the component will render a standalone svg * or a <g> tag that will be included in an external svg. Set standalone to false to * compose ChartGroup with other components within an enclosing <svg> tag. */ standalone?: boolean; /** * The style prop specifies styles for your ChartGroup. Any valid inline style properties * will be applied. Height, width, and padding should be specified via the height, * width, and padding props, as they are used to calculate the alignment of * components within chart. * * @propType { parent: object, data: object, labels: object } * @example {data: {fill: "red"}, labels: {fontSize: 12}} */ style?: VictoryStyleInterface; /** * The theme prop specifies a theme to use for determining styles and layout properties for a component. Any styles or * props defined in theme may be overwritten by props specified on the component instance. * * @propType object */ theme?: ChartThemeDefinition; /** * Specifies the theme color. Valid values are 'blue', 'green', 'multi', etc. * * Note: Not compatible with theme prop * * @example themeColor={ChartThemeColor.blue} */ themeColor?: string; /** * The width props specifies the width of the svg viewBox of the chart container * This value should be given as a number of pixels */ width?: number; /** * The x prop specifies how to access the X value of each data point. * If given as a function, it will be run on each data point, and returned value will be used. * If given as an integer, it will be used as an array index for array-type data points. * If given as a string, it will be used as a property key for object-type data points. * If given as an array of strings, or a string containing dots or brackets, * it will be used as a nested object property path (for details see Lodash docs for _.get). * If `null` or `undefined`, the data value will be used as is (identity function/pass-through). * * @propType number | string | Function | string[] * @example 0, 'x', 'x.value.nested.1.thing', 'x[2].also.nested', null, d => Math.sin(d) */ x?: DataGetterPropType; /** * The y prop specifies how to access the Y value of each data point. * If given as a function, it will be run on each data point, and returned value will be used. * If given as an integer, it will be used as an array index for array-type data points. * If given as a string, it will be used as a property key for object-type data points. * If given as an array of strings, or a string containing dots or brackets, * it will be used as a nested object property path (for details see Lodash docs for _.get). * If `null` or `undefined`, the data value will be used as is (identity function/pass-through). * * @propType number | string | Function | string[] * @example 0, 'y', 'y.value.nested.1.thing', 'y[2].also.nested', null, d => Math.sin(d) */ y?: DataGetterPropType; /** * Use y0 data accessor prop to determine how the component defines the baseline y0 data. * This prop is useful for defining custom baselines for components like ChartBar or ChartArea. * This prop may be given in a variety of formats. * * @propType number | string | Function | string[] * @example 'last_quarter_profit', () => 10, 1, 'employees.salary', ["employees", "salary"] */ y0?: DataGetterPropType; } export declare const ChartGroup: React.FunctionComponent<ChartGroupProps>; //# sourceMappingURL=ChartGroup.d.ts.map