Reputation: 2268
I've added Google chart to the head of my page. This returns an image of a chart.
I simply need to add a second chart to the same page.
The code for the second chart is ignored. I largely suspect this is due to me incorrectly combining the code for each chart.
First chart (line):
<!--Load the AJAX API-->
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.google.com/jsapi"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
// Load the Visualization API and the piechart package.
google.load('visualization', '1.0', {'packages':['corechart']});
// Set a callback to run when the Google Visualization API is loaded.
google.setOnLoadCallback(drawChart);
// Callback that creates and populates a data table,
// instantiates the pie chart, passes in the data and
// draws it.
function drawChart() {
var data = new google.visualization.DataTable();
data.addColumn('string', 'Month');
data.addColumn('number', 'Apples');
data.addColumn('number', 'Oranges');
data.addRows([
['Oct 11', 20, 0],
['Nov 11', 0, 0],
['Dec 12', 0, 20],
['Jan 12', 0, 10],
['Feb 12', 0, 10],
['March 12', 10, 10]
]);
// Set chart options
var options = {'width':960,
'height':300};
// Instantiate and draw our chart, passing in some options.
var chart = new google.visualization.LineChart(document.getElementById('line_chart'));
chart.draw(data, options);
}
</script>
Second chart (pie):
<!--Load the AJAX API-->
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.google.com/jsapi"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
// Load the Visualization API and the piechart package.
google.load('visualization', '1.0', {'packages':['corechart']});
// Set a callback to run when the Google Visualization API is loaded.
google.setOnLoadCallback(drawChart);
// Callback that creates and populates a data table,
// instantiates the pie chart, passes in the data and
// draws it.
function drawChart() {
// Create the data table.
var data = new google.visualization.DataTable();
data.addColumn('string', 'Topping');
data.addColumn('number', 'Slices');
data.addRows([
['Mushrooms', 3],
['Onions', 1],
['Olives', 1],
['Zucchini', 1],
['Pepperoni', 2]
]);
// Set chart options
var options = {'title':'How Much Pizza I Ate Last Night',
'width':400,
'height':300};
// Instantiate and draw our chart, passing in some options.
var chart = new google.visualization.PieChart(document.getElementById('chart_div'));
chart.draw(data, options);
}
</script>
Each of the charts are called in the body using a container div with a unique id:
<div id="chart_div"></div>
How do I stitch these two blocks of code together? I've tried copying drawChart() and specifying unique function names and variables but to no avail.
Upvotes: 55
Views: 86030
Reputation: 61
in above answer package for only pie is added..for printing pie and line chart on the same page we must include line package also: google.load('visualization', '1.0', {'packages':['corechart','line']});
full code:-
// Load the Visualization API and the piechart package.
google.load('visualization', '1.0', {'packages':['corechart','line']});
// Set a callback to run when the Google Visualization API is loaded.
google.setOnLoadCallback(drawChart);
// Callback that creates and populates a data table,
// instantiates the pie chart, passes in the data and
// draws it.
function drawChart() {
// Create the data table.
var data = new google.visualization.DataTable();
data.addColumn('string', 'Topping');
data.addColumn('number', 'Slices');
data.addRows([
['Mushrooms', 3],
['Onions', 1],
['Olives', 1],
['Zucchini', 1],
['Pepperoni', 2]
]);
// Create the data table.
var data2 = new google.visualization.DataTable();
data2.addColumn('string', 'Topping');
data2.addColumn('number', 'Slices');
data2.addRows([
['Mushrooms', 3],
['Onions', 1],
['Olives', 15],
['Zucchini', 1],
['Pepperoni', 2]
]);
var data3 = new google.visualization.DataTable();
data3.addColumn('string', 'Year');
data3.addColumn('number', 'Sales');
data3.addColumn('number', 'Expenses');
data3.addRows([
['2004', 1000, 400],
['2005', 1170, 460],
['2006', 860, 580],
['2007', 1030, 540]
]);
// Set chart options
var options = {'title':'How Much Pizza I Ate Last Night',
'width':400,
'height':300};
// Set chart options
var options2 = {'title':'How Much Pizza You Ate Last Night',
'width':400,
'height':300};
// Set chart options
var options3 = {'title':'Line chart',
'width':400,
'height':300};
// Instantiate and draw our chart, passing in some options.
var chart = new google.visualization.PieChart(document.getElementById('chart_div'));
chart.draw(data, options);
var chart2 = new google.visualization.PieChart(document.getElementById('chart_div2'));
chart2.draw(data2, options2);
var chart3 = new google.visualization.LineChart(document.getElementById('chart_div3'));
chart3.draw(data3, options3);
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<!--Divs that will hold the charts-->
<div id="chart_div"></div>
<div id="chart_div2"></div>
<div id="chart_div3"></div>
</body>
</html>
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 1
step_1.(change id curve_chart to some another name(eg.ajay))
<body>
<div id="ajay" style="width: 900px; height: 500px"></div>
step_2.(assign this id to your chart in script element)..
var chart = new google.visualization.LineChart(document.getElementById('ajay'));
chart.draw(data, options);
}
</script>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 9891
Production version of Google Charts has a timing bug that prevents more than one chart from loading on the same page.
Google fixed this in a recent release, available with the frozen version loader: https://developers.google.com/chart/interactive/docs/library_loading_enhancements#frozen-versions
Relevant thread: https://groups.google.com/forum/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer#!msg/google-visualization-api/KulpuT418cg/yZieM8buCQAJ
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 1
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.google.com/jsapi"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
google.load("visualization", "1.1", {packages:["bar"]});
google.setOnLoadCallback(drawChart);
function drawChart() {
var data = google.visualization.arrayToDataTable([
['Day/Month', 'Sales', 'Goal'],
['Daily', 33549.17,47328.04],
['M-T-D', 96114.18,141984.12]
]);
var data1 = google.visualization.arrayToDataTable([
['Day/Month', 'Bookings', 'Goal'],
['Daily', 37991.21,47659.09],
['M-T-D', 95610.47,142977.27]
]);
var options = {
colors: ['#e0aa0e', '#ecbb6e','green'],
width: 800,
chart: {
title: 'Test Company Sales',
subtitle: 'Sales vs Goal',
}
};
var options1 = {
colors: ['#e0440e', '#ec8f6e','green'],
width: 800,
chart: {
title: 'Test Company Bookings',
subtitle: 'Bookings',
}
};
var chart = new google.charts.Bar(document.getElementById('sales'));
chart.draw(data, options);
var chart2 = new google.charts.Bar(document.getElementById('bookings'));
chart2.draw(data1, options1);
}
</script>
<div style="display: table; width: 100%;">
<div style="display: table-row">
<div id="sales" style="width: 900px; height: 500px; display: table-cell;"></div>
<div id="bookings" style="width: 900px; height: 500px; display: table-cell;"></div>
</div>
</div>
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 118528
Based on @Dominor's answer, but if you are registering your charts from arbitrary, just build a function stack that gets executed in the callback function like so:
google.setOnLoadCallback(drawChart);
// Callback that creates and populates a data table,
// instantiates the pie chart, passes in the data and
// draws it.
googleChartStack = [];
function drawChart() {
for (var i = googleChartStack.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
googleChartStack[i]();
}
}
Then, somewhere else in your template, you can push to this stack. In my example, I was iterating through some template snippet.
<script>
googleChartStack.push(function() {
var data = google.visualization.arrayToDataTable([
['A', 'B'],
['A', 1],
['B', 2]
]);
var options = {
title: 'none',
legend: 'none'
};
var chart = new google.visualization.PieChart(document.getElementById("relevant-id"));
chart.draw(data, options);
})
</script>
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 1322
Basically you can wrap function drawChart
for parameters to pass on like:
function drawChart(chartType, containerID, dataArray, options)
and
call google.setOnLoadCallback(function() {
drawChart('barChart', 'div_id_1', test_array, null);
});
as many times as much you want to render graphs:
var test_array = [
['Name', 'Count-A', 'Count-B'],
['Test-A', 4, 3],
['Test-B', 1, 2],
['Test-C', 3, 4],
['Test-D', 2, 0],
['Test-E', 2, 5]
];
google.load("visualization", "1", {packages: ["corechart",'table']});
google.setOnLoadCallback(function() {
drawChart('barChart', 'div_id_1', test_array, null);
});
google.setOnLoadCallback(function() {
drawChart('columnChart', 'div_id_2', test_array, null);
});
function drawChart(chartType, containerID, dataArray, options) {
var data = google.visualization.arrayToDataTable(dataArray);
var containerDiv = document.getElementById(containerID);
var chart = false;
if (chartType.toUpperCase() == 'BARCHART') {
chart = new google.visualization.BarChart(containerDiv);
}
else if (chartType.toUpperCase() == 'COLUMNCHART') {
chart = new google.visualization.ColumnChart(containerDiv);
}
else if (chartType.toUpperCase() == 'PIECHART') {
chart = new google.visualization.PieChart(containerDiv);
}
else if (chartType.toUpperCase() == 'TABLECHART')
{
chart = new google.visualization.Table(containerDiv);
}
if (chart == false) {
return false;
}
chart.draw(data, options);
}
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 2445
What you want to do is have a function for each chart. Then do
google.setOnLoadCallback(initialize);
and have initialize call each function to create the chart. It is a lot cleaner that way than drawing multiple charts in one function. It also will help debugging as well.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2268
I now have a working solution. It involved discerning which parts of the example code to duplicate and what not to duplicate (as suggested by Oofpez). The data, options and chart variables for EACH of your charts are defined within the ONE drawChart() function.
Here is a working example (just copy and paste into a HTML document):
...This example further demonstrates how to combine different chart types i.e. pie and line...
<html>
<head>
<!--Load the AJAX API-->
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://www.google.com/jsapi"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
// Load the Visualization API and the piechart package.
google.load('visualization', '1.0', {'packages':['corechart']});
// Set a callback to run when the Google Visualization API is loaded.
google.setOnLoadCallback(drawChart);
// Callback that creates and populates a data table,
// instantiates the pie chart, passes in the data and
// draws it.
function drawChart() {
// Create the data table.
var data = new google.visualization.DataTable();
data.addColumn('string', 'Topping');
data.addColumn('number', 'Slices');
data.addRows([
['Mushrooms', 3],
['Onions', 1],
['Olives', 1],
['Zucchini', 1],
['Pepperoni', 2]
]);
// Create the data table.
var data2 = new google.visualization.DataTable();
data2.addColumn('string', 'Topping');
data2.addColumn('number', 'Slices');
data2.addRows([
['Mushrooms', 3],
['Onions', 1],
['Olives', 15],
['Zucchini', 1],
['Pepperoni', 2]
]);
var data3 = new google.visualization.DataTable();
data3.addColumn('string', 'Year');
data3.addColumn('number', 'Sales');
data3.addColumn('number', 'Expenses');
data3.addRows([
['2004', 1000, 400],
['2005', 1170, 460],
['2006', 860, 580],
['2007', 1030, 540]
]);
// Set chart options
var options = {'title':'How Much Pizza I Ate Last Night',
'width':400,
'height':300};
// Set chart options
var options2 = {'title':'How Much Pizza You Ate Last Night',
'width':400,
'height':300};
// Set chart options
var options3 = {'title':'Line chart',
'width':400,
'height':300};
// Instantiate and draw our chart, passing in some options.
var chart = new google.visualization.PieChart(document.getElementById('chart_div'));
chart.draw(data, options);
var chart2 = new google.visualization.PieChart(document.getElementById('chart_div2'));
chart2.draw(data2, options2);
var chart3 = new google.visualization.LineChart(document.getElementById('chart_div3'));
chart3.draw(data3, options3);
}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<!--Divs that will hold the charts-->
<div id="chart_div"></div>
<div id="chart_div2"></div>
<div id="chart_div3"></div>
</body>
</html>
Upvotes: 71
Reputation: 514
maybe when you specify
google.setOnLoadCallback(drawChart);
twice it overwrites the callback event for the first time?
Just a guess...
Upvotes: 4