NAME
Chart::Clicker - Powerful, extensible charting.
VERSION
version 2.80
SYNOPSIS
use Chart::Clicker;
my $cc = Chart::Clicker->new;
my @values = (42, 25, 86, 23, 2, 19, 103, 12, 54, 9);
$cc->add_data('Sales', \@values);
# alternately, you can add data one bit at a time...
foreach my $v (@values) {
$cc->add_data('Sales', $v);
}
# Or, if you want to specify the keys you can use a hashref
my $data = { 12 => 123, 13 => 341, 14 => 1241 };
$cc->add_data('Sales', $data);
$cc->write_output('foo.png');
DESCRIPTION
Chart::Clicker aims to be a powerful, extensible charting package that creates really pretty output. Charts can be saved in png, svg, pdf and postscript format.
Clicker leverages the power of Graphics::Primitive to create snazzy graphics without being tied to specific backend. You may want to begin with Chart::Clicker::Tutorial.
EXAMPLES
For code examples see the examples repository on GitHub: http://github.com/gphat/chart-clicker-examples/
FEATURES
Renderers
Clicker supports the following renderers:
- Line
- StackedLine
- Bar
- StackedBar
- Area
- StackedArea
- Bubble
- CandleStick
- Point
- Pie
- PolarArea
ADDING DATA
The synopsis shows the simple way to add data.
my @values = (42, 25, 86, 23, 2, 19, 103, 12, 54, 9);
foreach my $v (@values) {
$cc->add_data('Sales', $v);
}
This is a convenience method provided to make simple cases much simpler. Adding multiple Series to a chart is as easy as changing the name argument of add_data
. Each unique first argument will result in a separate series. See the docs for add_data
to learn more.
If you'd like to use the more advanced features of Clicker you'll need to shake off this simple method and build Series & DataSets explicitly.
use Chart::Clicker::Data::Series;
use Chart::Clicker::Data::DataSet;
...
my $series = Chart::Clicker::Data::Series->new(
keys => [ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 ],
values => [ 42, 25, 86, 23, 2, 19, 103, 12, 54, 9 ],
);
my $ds = Chart::Clicker::Data::DataSet->new(series => [ $series ]);
$cc->add_to_datasets($ds);
This used to be the only way to add data, but repeated requests to make the common case easier resulted in the inclusion of add_data
.
CONTEXTS
The normal use case for a chart is a couple of datasets on the same axes. Sometimes you want to chart one or more datasets on different axes. A common need for this is when you are comparing two datasets of vastly different scale such as the number of employees in an office (1-10) to monthly revenues (10s of thousands). On a normal chart the number of employees would show up as a flat line at the bottom of the chart.
To correct this, Clicker has contexts. A context is a pair of axes, a renderer and a name. The name is the 'key' by which you will refer to the context.
my $context = Chart::Clicker::Context->new( name => 'sales' );
$clicker->add_to_contexts($context);
$dataset->context('sales');
$clicker->add_to_datasets($dataset);
New contexts provide a fresh domain and range axis and default to a Line renderer.
Caveat: Clicker expects that the default context (identified by the string "default") will always be present. It is from this context that some of Clicker's internals draw their values. You should use the default context unless you need more than one, in which case you should use "default" as the base context.
FORMATS & OUTPUT
Clicker supports PNG, SVG, PDF and PostScript output. To change your output type, specificy it when you create your Clicker object:
my $cc = Chart::Clicker->new(format => 'pdf', ...);
# ...
$cc->write_output('chart.pdf');
If you are looking to get a scalar of the output for use with HTTP or similar things, you can use:
# ... make your chart
$cc->draw;
my $image_data = $cc->rendered_data;
If you happen to be using Catalyst then take a look at Catalyst::View::Graphics::Primitive.
ATTRIBUTES
background_color
Set/Get the background color. Defaults to white.
border
Set/Get the border.
color_allocator
Set/Get the color_allocator for this chart.
contexts
Set/Get the contexts for this chart.
datasets
Get/Set the datasets for this chart.
driver
Set/Get the driver used to render this Chart. Defaults to Graphics::Primitive::Driver::Cairo.
format
Get the format for this Chart. Required in the constructor. Must be on of Png, Pdf, Ps or Svg.
grid_over
Flag controlling if the grid is rendered over the data. Defaults to 0. You probably want to set the grid's background color to an alpha of 0 if you enable this flag.
height
Set/Get the height. Defaults to 300.
layout_manager
Set/Get the layout manager. Defaults to Layout::Manager::Compass.
legend
Set/Get the legend that will be used with this chart.
legend_position
The position the legend will be added. Should be one of north, south, east, west or center as required by Layout::Manager::Compass.
marker_overlay
Set/Get the marker overlay object that will be used if this chart has markers. This is lazily constructed to save time.
over_decorations
Set/Get an arrayref of "over decorations", or things that are drawn OVER the chart. This is an advanced feature. See overaxis-bar.pl
in the examples.
padding
Set/Get the padding. Defaults to 3px on all sides.
plot
Set/Get the plot on which things are drawn.
subgraphs
You can add "child" graphs to this one via add_subgraph
. These must be Chart::Clicker objects and they will be added to the bottom of the existing chart. This is a rather esoteric feature.
title
Set/Get the title component for this chart. This is a Graphics::Primitive::TextBox, not a string. To set the title of a chart you should access the TextBox's text
method.
$cc->title->text('A Title!');
$cc->title->font->size(20);
# etc, etc
If the title has text then it is added to the chart in the position specified by title_position
.
You should consult the documentation for Graphics::Primitive::TextBox for things like padding and text rotation. If you are adding it to the top and want some padding between it and the plot, you can:
$cc->title->padding->bottom(5);
title_position
The position the title will be added. Should be one of north, south, east, west or center as required by Layout::Manager::Compass.
Note that if no angle is set for the title then it will be changed to -1.5707 if the title position is east or west.
width
Set/Get the width. Defaults to 500.
METHODS
context_count
Get a count of contexts.
context_names
Get a list of context names.
delete_context ($name)
Remove the context with the specified name.
get_context ($name)
Get the context with the specified name
set_context ($name, $context)
Set a context of the specified name.
add_to_datasets
Add the specified dataset (or arrayref of datasets) to the chart.
dataset_count
Get a count of datasets.
get_dataset ($index)
Get the dataset at the specified index.
rendered_data
Returns the data for this chart as a scalar. Suitable for 'streaming' to a client.
add_to_over_decorations
Add an over decoration to the list.
get_over_decoration ($index)
Get the over decoration at the specified index.
over_decoration_count
Get a count of over decorations.
add_to_contexts
Add the specified context to the chart.
add_subgraph
Add a subgraph to this chart.
draw
Draw this chart.
get_datasets_for_context
Returns an arrayref containing all datasets for the given context. Used by renderers to get a list of datasets to chart.
add_data ($name, $data)
Convenience method for adding data to the chart. Can be called one of three ways.
- scalar
-
Passing a name and a scalar will "add" the scalar data to that series' data.
$cc->add_data('Sales', 1234); $cc->add_data('Sales', 1235);
This will result in a Series names 'Sales' with two values.
- arrayref
-
Passing a name and an arrayref works much the same as the scalar method discussed above, but appends the supplied arrayref to the existing one. It may be mixed with the scalar method.
$cc->add_data('Sales', \@some_sales); $cc->add_data('Sales', \@some_more_sales); # This works still! $cc->add_data('Sales', 1234);
- hashref
-
This allows you to pass both keys and add in all at once, but it's an all-or-nothing thing. Subsequent calls with the same name will overwrite previous calls.
$cc->add_data('Sales', { 2009 => 1234, 2010 => 1235 }); # Overwrites last call! $cc->add_data('Sales', { 2011 => 1234, 2012 => 1235 });
set_renderer ($renderer_object, [ $context ]);
Sets the renderer on the specified context. If no context is provided then 'default' is assumed.
write
This method is passed through to the underlying driver. It is only necessary that you call this if you manually called draw
beforehand. You likely want to use write_output
.
write_output ($path)
Write the chart output to the specified location. Output is written in the format provided to the constructor (which defaults to Png). Internally calls draw
for you. If you use this method, do not call draw
first!
$c->write_output('/path/to/the.png');
inside_width
Get the width available in this container after taking away space for insets and borders.
inside_height
Get the height available in this container after taking away space for insets and borders.
ISSUES WITH CENTOS
I've had numerous reports of problems with Chart::Clicker when using CentOS. This problem has usually be solved by updating the version of cairo. I've had reports that upgrading to at least cairo-1.8.8-3 makes thinks work properly.
I hesitate to provide any other data with this because it may get out of date fast. If you have trouble feel free to drop me an email and I'll tell you what I know.
CONTRIBUTORS
Many thanks to the individuals who have contributed various bits:
Ash Berlin
Brian Cassidy
Guillermo Roditi
Torsten Schoenfeld
Yuval Kogman
SOURCE
Chart::Clicker is on github:
http://github.com/gphat/chart-clicker/tree/master
AUTHOR
Cory G Watson <gphat@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Cold Hard Code, LLC.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.