Skip to content

szekeresa/lavacharts

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Lavacharts Total Downloads License PayPayl

Lavacharts is a graphing / chart library for PHP5.3+ that wraps the Google Chart API

Stable: Current Release Build Status Coverage Status

Dev: Masater Branch Build Status Coverage Status

Version 2 Features

  • Blade template extensions for laravel
  • A new "lava" javascript api
  • Javascript event integration
  • Datatable addColumn aliases
  • Datatable column formatters
  • Carbon support for date columns
  • Now supporting 9 Charts!
    • Area
    • Calendar
    • Column
    • Combo
    • Donut
    • Gauge
    • Geo
    • Line
    • Pie

###Complete documentation with examples, and the api can be found at Lavacharts.com

Installing

In your project's main composer.json file, add this line to the requirements:

"khill/lavacharts": "2.2.*"

Run Composer to install Lavacharts:

composer update

For Laravel

Register Lavacharts in your app by adding this line to the end of the providers array in app/config/app.php:

'providers' => array(
    ...

    "Khill\Lavacharts\Laravel\LavachartsServiceProvider"
),

Don't worry about the Lava alias, the service provider registers it automatically.

Usage

The creation of charts is separated into two parts: First, within a route or controller, you define the chart, the data table, and the customization of the output.

Second, within a view, you use one line and the library will output all the necessary javascript code for you.

Basic Example

Here is an example of the simplest chart you can create: A line chart with one dataset and a title, no configuration.

Controller

    $stocksTable = $lava->DataTable();  // Lava::DataTable() if using Laravel

    $stocksTable->addDateColumn('Day of Month')
                ->addNumberColumn('Projected')
                ->addNumberColumn('Official');

    // Random Data For Example
    for ($a = 1; $a < 30; $a++)
    {
        $rowData = array(
          "2014-8-$a", rand(800,1000), rand(800,1000)
        );

        $stocksTable->addRow($rowData);
    }

Arrays work for datatables as well...

  $stocksTable->addColumns(array(
    array('date', 'Day of Month'),
    array('number', 'Projected'),
    array('number', 'Official')
  ));

...and for setting chart options!

  $lineChart = $lava->LineChart('Stocks')
                    ->setOptions(array(
                        'datatable' => $stocksTable,
                        'title' => 'Stock Market Trends'
                      ));

View

If you are using Laravel and the Blade templating engine, there are some nifty extensions thrown in for a cleaner view

@linechart('Stocks', 'stocks-div');
// Behind the scenes this just calls Lava::renderLineChart('Stocks', 'stocks-div')

Or you can use the new render method, passing in the chart type, label, and element id.

echo Lava::render('LineChart', 'Stocks', 'stocks-div');

This is all assuming you already have a div in your page with the id "stocks-div": <div id="stocks-div"></div>

If you don't have a div ready to accept the charts, add one more parameter to @linechart() or render() and it will be created for you.

Add true to for the library to create a plain div, or an array with keys width & height

Example:

  @linechart('Stocks', 'stocks-div', true)
  // Or
  echo Lava::render('LineChart', 'Stocks', 'stocks-div', array('width'=>1024, 'height'=>768));

Charts can be rendered from the $lava master object you created, as shown above, or you can pass the chart object to your view, and call the render() method with the element id of your div. This will bypass needing to specify the type and title of the chart.

Notice

If you are using Lavacharts with Composer and not in Laravel, that's fine, just make sure to: require 'vendor/autoload.php'; within you project.

Create an instance of Lavacharts: $lava = new Khill\Lavacharts\Lavacharts;

Replace all of the Lava:: aliases in the examples, by chaining from the Lavacharts object you created.

Use $dt = $lava->DataTable(); instead of $dt = Lava::DataTable();

Changelog

  • 2.1

    • Calendar Chart support
  • 2.0.5

    • Updated Carbon
    • Laravel 5 compatability
  • 2.0.4

    • Multiple chart bug fixes
  • 2.0.3

    • Fixing event bugs
  • 2.0.2

    • Responsive charts
  • 2.0.1

    • Multiple chart support
  • 2.0.0

    • Its Here!
  • 2.0.0-beta1

    • Passed 75% test coverage
    • Added new options to TextStyle
      • Bold
      • Italic
  • 2.0.0-alpha4

    • Added Events
      • select
      • onmouseover
      • onmouseout
  • 2.0.0-alpha3

    • Added DataTable column formatters
      • DateFormat
      • NumberFormat
  • 2.0.0-alpha2

    • Added render method in favor of outputInto method
    • Added blade template extensions for seamless chart rendering
    • Moar tests!
  • 2.0.0-alpha1

    • Refactored the main Lavacharts class to not be static anymore (yay!)
    • Moved the creation of the javascript into it's own class
    • Added a new class "Volcano" to store all the charts.
    • Modfied the charts to not staticly call the Lavacharts functions
    • DataTables are no longer magic, but applied via method chaining
    • Added render method in favor of outputInto method
    • Added blade template extensions as aliases to the render method
    • Tests tests tests!
    • Using phpcs to bring all the code up to PSR2 standards

About

Lavacharts is a graphing / charting library for PHP 5.3+ that wraps the Google Chart Javascript API for ease of use in any project.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • PHP 100.0%