Reputation: 735
I am trying to add an on click event to my Line chart using Chart.js. I already have my tool tips enabled to show the information from my line charts, but I would also like to add an on click method that will let me know where the user clicked on the x axis. For now I would just like an alert to pop up, giving me the value on the x axis where the user clicked.
RESEARCH:
I looked through the documentation of Chart.js and I came across this method: .getPointsAtEvent(event)
Calling getPointsAtEvent(event) on your Chart instance passing an argument of an event, or jQuery event, will return the point elements that are at that the same position of that event.
canvas.onclick = function(evt){
var activePoints = myLineChart.getPointsAtEvent(evt);
// => activePoints is an array of points on the canvas that are at the same position as the click event. };
I just can't figure out how to use or where to place the function in my code. If anyone could help me figure out where I can add this to my code, it would be greatly appreciated!
MY CODE: (in javascript)
//NOTE: the div 'roomForChart' has been already declared as <div id="roomForChart"></div>
//creating html code inside of javascript to display the canvas used for the graph
htmlForGraph = "<canvas id='myChart' width ='500' height='400'>";
document.getElementById('roomForChart').innerHTML += htmlForGraph;
//NOW TO CREATE DATA
//the data for my line chart
var data = {
labels: ["Aug 1", "Aug 2", "Aug 3","Aug 4","Aug 5"], //the x axis
datasets: [
{ //my red line
label: "Usage Plan",
fillColor: "rgba(255,255,255,0.2)", //adds the color below the line
strokeColor: "rgba(224,0,0,1)",//creates the line
pointColor: "rgba(244,0,0,1)",
pointStrokeColor: "#fff",
pointHighlightFill: "#fff",
pointHighlightStroke: "rgba(220,220,220,1)",
data: [1024, 1024, 1024, 1024, 1024]
},
{ //my green line
label: "Overall Usage",
fillColor: "rgba(48,197,83,0.2)",
strokeColor: "rgba(48,197,83,1)",
pointColor: "rgba(48,197,83,1)",
pointStrokeColor: "#fff",
pointHighlightFill: "#fff",
pointHighlightStroke: "rgba(48,197,83,1)",
data: [15, 25, 45, 45, 1500]
},
{ //my blue line
label: "Daily Usage",
fillColor: "rgba(151,187,205,0.2)",
strokeColor: "rgba(151,187,205,1)",
pointColor: "rgba(151,187,205,1)",
pointStrokeColor: "#fff",
pointHighlightFill: "#fff",
pointHighlightStroke: "rgba(151,187,205,1)",
data: [15, 10, 20, 0, 5]
}
] //ending the datasets
}; //ending data
//creating a variable for my chart
var ctx = document.getElementById("myChart").getContext("2d");
//code to create a maximum y value on the chart
var maxUsage = 1024;
var maxSteps = 5;
var myLineChart = new Chart(ctx).Line(data, {
pointDot: false,
scaleOverride: true,
scaleSteps: maxSteps,
scaleStepWidth: Math.ceil(maxUsage / maxSteps),
scaleStartValue: 0
});
//what I have tried but it doesn't show an alert message
ctx.onclick = function(evt){
var activePoints = myLineChart.getPointsAtEvent(evt);
// => activePoints is an array of points on the canvas that are at the same position as the click event.
alert("See me?");
};
To those of you who have a hard time visualizing the chart here you go:
Hopefully I have provided enough information to get some help. Please let me know if I need to explain myself. Thank you in advance!!! :)
Upvotes: 19
Views: 60510
Reputation: 1217
In current version(3.9.1) i could not find .getPointsAtEvent(event)
no more.
As a workaround that worked for me I found in Chart.js GitHub
code sample
var selectedPoint;
....
options: {
plugins: {
tooltip: {
callbacks: {
afterBody: function(context) {
if(context && context[0])
selectedPoint = context[0];
return [''];
}
}
}
},
.....
onClick: (e) => {
console.log(selectedPoint);
}
}
Basicaly on tooltip generation you save data to variable selectedPoint
and in onClick
event you start using it.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 31371
V3
You can also use the build in onClick
option which gets the following paramters: (event, activeElements, chartInstance)
So you can just read the array you get as second element to see which elements have been active. By default this array contains only 1 item but if you change your interaction modes multiple items could be in here.
var options = {
type: 'bar',
data: {
labels: ["Red", "Blue", "Yellow", "Green", "Purple", "Orange"],
datasets: [{
label: '# of Votes',
data: [12, 19, 3, 5, 2, 3],
backgroundColor: 'pink'
},
{
label: '# of Points',
data: [7, 11, 5, 8, 3, 7],
backgroundColor: 'orange'
}
]
},
options: {
onClick: (evt, activeElements, chart) => {
console.log(`DatasetIndex: ${activeElements[0].datasetIndex} DataIndex: ${activeElements[0].index}`)
}
}
}
var ctx = document.getElementById('chartJSContainer').getContext('2d');
new Chart(ctx, options);
<body>
<canvas id="chartJSContainer" width="600" height="400"></canvas>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/Chart.js/3.6.0/chart.js"></script>
</body>
In v3 the getElementsAtEvent
has been removed and now you have to use: chart.getElementsAtEventForMode(event, 'index', { intersect: true }, false)
If you want to use getDatasetAtEvent
you now have to use: chart.getElementsAtEventForMode(e, 'dataset', { intersect: true }, false)
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 4099
The answers provided to date are close to the correct solution(s), but are incomplete. You need to use the getElementsAtEvent() to get the correct elements, but this gives you a collection of elements that are at the clicked x-index. In the even that you are using more than one dataset, this could be several values, one from each data set.
To figure out the correct data set to pull from, call the getDatasetAtEvent() method. This will return a list of the elements that contains the clicked dataset element. Pick the dataset Id from any of them, they are all the same Id.
Put the two together and you have the call you need to figure out the data contained in the clicked element. Passing in more than just and x and y value when you init your data set will let you do all sorts of neat tricks with this event. (For example, trigger a popup with more detailed info about the event)
There might be a more succinct way of getting this data, but I didn't find it mucking around the chart docs and tickets. Perhaps they will add it in a future release.
// chart_name is whatever your chart object is named. here I am using a
// jquery selector to attach the click event.
$('#' + chart_name).click(function (e)
{
var activePoints = myChart.getElementsAtEvent(event);
var activeDataSet = myChart.getDatasetAtEvent(event);
if (activePoints.length > 0)
{
var clickedDatasetIndex = activeDataSet[0]._datasetIndex;
var clickedElementIndex = activePoints[0]._index;
var value = myChart.data.datasets[clickedDatasetIndex].data[clickedElementIndex];
}
// todo: add code to do something with value.
});
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 899
if youre using the new ChartJs version use this:
canvas.onclick = function(evt){
var activePoints = myLineChart.getElementsAtEvent(evt);
};
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 4234
I couldn't get the onclick
method to work.
But I finally managed to run it using the click
method:
$("#canvas_id").click(function(e) {
var activeBars = myBarChart.getBarsAtEvent(e);
console.log(activeBars[0]);
});
Note: this example if for the Bar chart - other charts have slightly different methods to retrieve the points (see the documentation).
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 9235
Change this line
document.getElementById('roomForChart').innerHTML += htmlForGraph;
to this
holder = document.getElementById('roomForChart');
holder.innerHTML += htmlForGraph;
and further you'll have your snippet, modified a bit
holder.onclick = function(evt){
var activePoints = myLineChart.getPointsAtEvent(evt);
// => activePoints is an array of points on the canvas that are at the same position as the click event.
alert("See me?");
};
Add console.log(activePoints);
within onclick handler to see the content of the activePoints
variable. As I can see, there are three objects. For instance these are values for activePoints[0]
datasetLabel: "Usage Plan"
fillColor: "rgba(244,0,0,1)"
highlightFill: "#fff"
highlightStroke: "rgba(220,220,220,1)"
label: "Aug 4"
strokeColor: "#fff"
value: 1024
x: 371
y: 12.356097560975627
And they may be accessed as following
activePoints[0].label
activePoints[0].x
activePoints[0].y
activePoints[0].value
It will be good to check if the property is undefined
first, since there are no data behind every click event.
Upvotes: 8