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jQuery Sparklines (Inline Charts) – Small Line Charts without axes or coordinates

jQuery Sparklines (Inline Charts) – Small Line Charts without axes or coordinates

This jQuery plugin generates sparklines (small inline charts) directly in the browser using data supplied either inline in the HTML, or via javascript.

The plugin is compatible with most modern browsers and has been tested with Firefox 2+, Safari 3+, Opera 9, Google Chrome and Internet Explorer 6, 7, 8, 9 & 10 as well as iOS and Android.

Each example displayed below takes just 1 line of HTML or javascript to generate.

The plugin was written by Gareth Watts for Splunk Inc and released under the New BSD License.

http://omnipotent.net/jquery.sparkline/examples/simple.html

jQuery Sparklines

Some Latest features added to plugin:

  • Customizable mouseover tooltips and interaction including highlighting of moused-over values.
  • Click interaction with moused-over values
  • Support for stacked bar charts
  • Line charts may not have spot-markers on any/all points
  • Much more flexible colour maps for bar and tristate charts
  • Numerous bug fixes and performance enhancements

 

Sparkline – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia// // //

A sparkline is a very small line chart, typically drawn without axes or coordinates. It presents the general shape of the variation (typically over time) in some measurement, such as temperatureor stock market price, in a simple and highly condensed way.[1] Sparklines are small enough to be embedded in text, or several sparklines may be grouped together as elements of a small multiple.

Whereas the typical chart is designed to show as much data as possible, and is set off from the flow of text, sparklines are intended to be succinct, memorable, and located where they are discussed.

jQuery Sparklines

Quick Start

To add some sparklines to your web page you need four things:

  1. The jQuery javascript library loaded into the page – At least version 1.4.3 or higher
  2. A copy of jquery.sparkline.js loaded into the page which you can download from this site
  3. An inline tag on the page within which to display the sparkline (eg. <span>)
  4. A call to the sparkline() function to actually display the sparkline.

Additionally rendering the page in standards mode (see the DOCTYPE declaration in the example below) maximizes compatibilty with Internet Explorer.

Here’s a simple web page that will display some sparklines:

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" 
    "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
<head>

    <script type="text/javascript" src="jquery-1.7.2.js"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript" src="jquery.sparkline.js"></script>

    <script type="text/javascript">
    $(function() {
        /** This code runs when everything has been loaded on the page */
        /* Inline sparklines take their values from the contents of the tag */
        $('.inlinesparkline').sparkline(); 

        /* Sparklines can also take their values from the first argument 
        passed to the sparkline() function */
        var myvalues = [10,8,5,7,4,4,1];
        $('.dynamicsparkline').sparkline(myvalues);

        /* The second argument gives options such as chart type */
        $('.dynamicbar').sparkline(myvalues, {type: 'bar', barColor: 'green'} );

        /* Use 'html' instead of an array of values to pass options 
        to a sparkline with data in the tag */
        $('.inlinebar').sparkline('html', {type: 'bar', barColor: 'red'} );
    });
    </script>
</head>
<body>

<p>
Inline Sparkline: <span class="inlinesparkline">1,4,4,7,5,9,10</span>.
</p>
<p>
Sparkline with dynamic data: <span class="dynamicsparkline">Loading..</span>
</p>
<p>
Bar chart with dynamic data: <span class="dynamicbar">Loading..</span>
</p>
<p>
Bar chart with inline data: <span class="inlinebar">1,3,4,5,3,5</span>
</p>


</body>
</html>

Click here to open this example in a new window.

As the example shows, the values to be used in a sparkline can either be supplied inline, inside the tag to be used as the target or can be passed as the first parameter to the sparkline() function.

To draw different types of charts, or overlay one on top of another, or display charts into hidden layers, read on.

Syntax

$(selector).sparkline(values, options);

Values can either be an array of numbers or “html” which causes the values to be read from from the selected tag:

<span class="sparklines">1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1</span>
<span id="ticker"">Loading..</span>

<script type="text/javascript">
$('.sparklines').sparkline('html');
$('#ticker').sparkline([1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1]);
</script>

Values supplied in the tag can also appear inside a comment, or as an attribute of the tag itself:

<span class="sparklines"><!-- 1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1 --></span>
<span class="sparklines" values="1,2,3,4,5,4,3,2,1"></span>

By default the plugin will look for an attribute called “values” on the tag to find values to render, but you can change this by setting the tagValuesAttribute option. This can be useful if you want to create a composite graph as you can use different names for the values attribute for each graph.

Options is an object that specifies the type of sparkline to draw, colours to use, etc.

$('#barchart').sparkline(myvalues, { type:'bar', barColor:'green' });

If necessary, options can be passed as attributes on each tag. This requires setting the enableTagOptions option when calling the sparklines() function and reduces performance somewhat (more critical on IE6)

<span class="sparklines" sparkType="bar" sparkBarColor="green"><!-- 1,2,3,4,3,2,1 --></span>
<span class="sparklines" sparkType="bar" sparkBarColor="red"><!-- 1,2,3,4,3,2,1 --></span>

<script type="text/javascript">
$('.sparklines').sparkline('html', { enableTagOptions: true });
</script>

Each option must be prefixed with “spark”, though this can be changed by passing a tagOptionPrefix option to the sparkline() function

You can also override the default options for all subsequent sparklines by assigning values to $.fn.sparkline.defaults

Eg. to change the default line color as listed in the common options below, you can do:

$.fn.sparkline.defaults.common.lineColor = 'red';

Replace ‘common’ with ‘line’, ‘bar’, ‘tristate’, ‘discrete’, ‘bullet’, ‘pie’ or ‘box’ to set options specific to those chart types.

Common Options

These options can be set for most of the supported chart types.

type One of ‘line’ (default), ‘bar’, ‘tristate’, ‘discrete’, ‘bullet’, ‘pie’ or ‘box’
width Width of the chart – Defaults to ‘auto’ – May be any valid css width – 1.5em, 20px, etc (using a number without a unit specifier won’t do what you want) – This option does nothing for bar and tristate chars (see barWidth)
height Height of the chart – Defaults to ‘auto’ (line height of the containing tag)
lineColor Used by line and discrete charts to specify the colour of the line drawn as a CSS values string
fillColor Specify the colour used to fill the area under the graph as a CSS value. Set to false to disable fill
chartRangeMin Specify the minimum value to use for the range of Y values of the chart – Defaults to the minimum value supplied
chartRangeMax Specify the maximum value to use for the range of Y values of the chart – Defaults to the maximum value supplied
composite If true then don’t erase any existing chart attached to the tag, but draw another chart over the top – Note that width and height are ignored if an existing chart is detected.
Note: You’ll usually want to lock the axis on both charts using chartRangeMin and chartRangeMax if you want the same value on each chart to occupy the same point.
enableTagOptions If true then options can be specified as attributes on each tag to be transformed into a sparkline, as well as passed to the sparkline() function. See also tagOptionPrefix
tagOptionPrefix String that each option passed as an attribute on a tag must begin with. Defaults to ‘spark’
tagValuesAttribute The name of the tag attribute to fetch values from, if present – Defaults to ‘values’
disableHiddenCheck Set to true to disable checking for hidden sparklines. This can be beneficial if you know you’ll never attempt to draw a sparkline into a hidden parent element as it avoids a browser reflow for the test, increasing rendering performance.
Defaults to false – New in 2.0

Range Maps

Several parameters, such as colorMap and tooltipLookupValues accept a range map as a paramter. As the name suggest, it maps ranges of numbers to values. For example:

    var range_map = $.range_map({
        1: 'red',
        '2:9': 'yellow',
        '10:': 'red'
    })

This would map 1 to red, values of 2 through 9 (inclusive) to yellow and values of 10 and higher to ‘red’

Hidden Sparklines

If you try to display a sparkline in a tag that’s currently not visible (ie. the tag or one of its parents are set to display:none) then you’ll find that the sparkline hasn’t been rendered when you finally do make the tag visible. This is because a tag with display:none has no size, and thus a canvas can’t be created and sized for the sparkline to be rendered to.

The solution is to call the $.sparkline_display_visible() function anytime a sparkline may have become visible so that it can be correctly rendered. This is the technique this site uses to handle the sparklines that are hidden in the different tabbed sections; the site calls the routine in the tab-changed callback.

Note that as of version 2.0, support for hidden sparklines can be disabled by supplying the disabledHiddenCheck option. This can result in a performance increase in some cases.

Line Charts

Line charts are the default chart type, but to specify the type explicitly set an option called “type” to “line”.

defaultPixelsPerValue Defaults to 3 pixels of width for each value in the chart
spotColor The CSS colour of the final value marker. Set to false or an empty string to hide it
minSpotColor The CSS colour of the marker displayed for the mimum value. Set to false or an empty string to hide it
maxSpotColor The CSS colour of the marker displayed for the maximum value. Set to false or an empty string to hide it
spotRadius Radius of all spot markers, In pixels (default: 1.5) – Integer
valueSpots Specifies which points to draw spots on, and with which colour. Accepts a range. For example, to render green spots on all values less than 50 and red on values higher use {':49': 'green, '50:': 'red'}
New in 2.0
highlightSpotColor Specifies a colour for the spot that appears on a value when moused over. Set to null to disable.
Defaults to #f5f – New in 2.0
highlightLineColor Specifies a colour for the vertical line that appears through a value when moused over. Set to null to disable.
Defaults to #f22 – New in 2.0
lineWidth In pixels (default: 1) – Integer
normalRangeMin, normalRangeMax Specify threshold values between which to draw a bar to denote the “normal” or expected range of values. For example the green bar here might denote a normal operating temperature range
drawNormalOnTop By default the normal range is drawn behind the fill area of the chart. Setting this option to true causes it to be drawn over the top of the fill area
xvalues See below
chartRangeClip If true then the y values supplied to plot will be clipped to fall between chartRangeMin and chartRangeMax – By default chartRangeMin/Max just ensure that the chart spans at least that range of values, but does not constrain it
chartRangeMinX Specifies the minimum value to use for the X value of the chart
chartRangeMaxX Specifies the maximum value to use for the X value of the chart

See also all of the common options above, that can also be used with line charts

By default the values supplied to line charts are presumed to be y values mapping on to sequential (integer) x values. If you need to specify both the x and y values for your chart, you have a few options:

  1. Inline: x and y values are separated by a colon: x:y,x:y,x:y – eg. <span class=”linechart”>1:3,2.7:4,4.8:3</span>
  2. Array of arrays: An array of [x,y] arrays: $(‘#linechart’).sparkline([ [1,3], [2.7,4], [4.8,3] ]);
  3. Separate arrays: Pass x values separately: $(‘#linechart’).sparkline([3,4,3], { xvalues: [1,2.7,4.8]});

You can also specify a value of “null” to omit values from the chart completely. eg:
<span class=”linechart”>1,2,3,null,3,4,2</span> becomes:

Bar Charts

Set the “type” option to “bar” to generate bar charts. Values can be omitted by using the “null” value instead of a number.

barColor CSS colour used for postive values
negBarColor CSS colour used for negative values
zeroColor CSS colour used for values equal to zero
nullColor CSS colour used for values equal to null – By default null values are omitted entirely, but setting this adds a thin marker for the entry – This can be useful if your chart is pretty sparse; perhaps try setting it to a light grey or something equally unobtrusive
barWidth Width of each bar, in pixels (integer)
barSpacing Space between each bar, in pixels (integer)
zeroAxis Centers the y-axis at zero if true (default)
colorMap A range map to map specific values to selected colours. For example if you want all values of -2 to appear yellow, use colorMap: { ‘-2’: ‘#ff0’ }.
As of version 1.5 you may also pass an array of values here instead of a mapping to specifiy a color for each individual bar. For example if your chart has three values 1,3,1 you can set colorMap=[“red”, “green”, “blue”]
As of version 2.0, objects will be automatically be converted to range maps so you can specify colours for a range of values
stackedBarColor An array of colours to use for stacked bar charts. The first series will use the first value in the array, the second series will use the second, etc. New in 2.0

See also all of the common options above, that can also be used with bar charts

Version 2.0 adds support for stacked bar charts. Values for each data series in the chart can be separated by colons if passed by html, or as an array of arrays.

For example, to draw series one with values of 1,2,3,4 and series 2 with values of 4,3,2,1:

    <span class="bar">1:4,2:3,3:2,4:1</span>
    // same result as the html data above
    $('.bar').sparkline([ [1,4], [2, 3], [3, 2], [4, 1] ], { type: 'bar' });

Tristate Charts

Tri-state charts are useful to show win-lose-draw information, such as the SF Giants recent game results at the top of the page. You can also use the colorMap option to use different colours for different values, or for arbitrary positions in the chart.

Set the “type” option to “tristate” to generate tristate charts.

posBarColor CSS colour for positive (win) values
negBarColor CSS colour for negative (lose) values
zeroBarColor CSS colour for zero (draw) values
barWidth Width of each bar, in pixels (integer)
barSpacing Space between each bar, in pixels (integer)
colorMap A range map to map specific values to selected colours. For example if you want all values of -2 to appear yellow, use colorMap: { ‘-2’: ‘#ff0’ }.
As of version 1.5 you may also pass an array of values here instead of a mapping to specifiy a color for each individual bar. For example if your chart has three values 1,3,1 you can set colorMap=[“red”, “green”, “blue”]
As of version 2.0, objects will be automatically be converted to range maps so you can specify colours for a range of values.

See also all of the common options above, that can also be used with tristate charts

Discrete Charts

Discrete charts provide a separated thin vertical line for each value.

Set the “type” option to “discrete” to generate discrete charts.

lineHeight Height of each line in pixels – Defaults to 30% of the graph height
thresholdValue Values less than this value will be drawn using thresholdColor instead of lineColor
thresholdColor Colour to use in combination with thresholdValue

See also all of the common options above, that can also be used with discrete charts

Bullet Graphs

See the wikipedia page for more information on Bullet graphs.
Supplied values must be in this order: target, performance, range1, range2, range3, …

Set the “type” option to “bullet” to generate bullet graphs.

targetColor The CSS colour of the vertical target marker
targetWidth The width of the target marker in pixels (integer)
performanceColor The CSS color of the performance measure horizontal bar
rangeColors Colors to use for each qualitative range background color – This must be a javascript array. eg [‘red’,’green’, ‘#22f’]

See also all of the common options above, that can also be used with bullet charts

Pie Charts

Set the “type” option to “pie” to generate pie charts.

These little pie charts tend only to be useful with 2 or 3 values at most

sliceColors An array of CSS colors to use for pie slices
offset Angle in degrees to offset the first slice – Try -90 or +90
borderWidth Width of the border to draw around the whole pie chart, in pixels.
Defaults to 0 (no border) – New in 2.0
borderColor CSS color to use to draw the pie border.
Defaults to #000 – New in 2.0

See also all of the common options above, that can also be used with pie charts

Box Plots

See the wikipedia page for more information on Box plots

Set the “type” option to “box” to generate box plots.

raw If set to false (default) then the values supplied are used to caculate the box data points for you. If true then you must pre-calculate the points (see below)
showOutliers If true (default) then outliers (values > 1.5x the IQR) are marked with circles and the whiskers are placed at Q1 and Q3 instead of the least and greatest value
outlierIQR Set the inter-quartile range multipler used to calculate values that qualify as an outlier – Defaults to 1.5
boxLineColor CSS line colour used to outline the box
boxFillColor CSS fill colour used for the box
whiskerColor CSS colour used to draw the whiskers
outlierLineColor CSS colour used to draw the outlier circles
outlierFillColor CSS colour used to fill the outlier circles
spotRadius Radius in pixels to draw the outlier circles
medianColor CSS colour used to draw the median line
target If set to a value, then a small crosshair is drawn at that point to represent a target value
targetColor CSS colour used to draw the target crosshair, if set
minValue If minvalue and maxvalue are set then the scale of the plot is fixed. By default minValue and maxValue are deduced from the values supplied
maxValue See minValue

See also all of the common options above, that can also be used with box plot charts

As noted in the options above, by default “raw” is set to false. This means that you can just pass an arbitrarily long list of values to the sparkline function and the corresponding box plot will be calculated from those values. This is probably the behaviour you want most of the time.

If, on the other hand, you have thousands of values to deal with you may want to pre-compute the points needed for the box plot. In that case, set raw=true and pass in the computed values. If showing outliers, supplied values of:
low_outlier, low_whisker, q1, median, q3, high_whisker, high_outlier
Omit the outliers and set showOutliers to false to omit outlier display.

Interactive Sparklines

Version 2.0 of the plugin introduces support for interactive sparklines in the form of tooltips, mouseover highlighting and click interaction for all supported types of sparkline.

If you’re happy with the default look and feel of the tooltips, you can skip this entire section.

Options to control sparkline interactions:

disableInteraction Set to true to disable all sparkline interactivity, making the plugin behave in much the same way as it did in 1.x
Defaults to false
disableTooltips Set to true to disable mouseover tooltips.
Defaults to false
disableHighlight Set to true to disable the highlighting of individual values when mousing over a sparkline.
Defaults to false
highlightLighten Controls the amount to lighten or darken a value when moused over. A value of 1.5 will lighten by 50%, 0.5 will darken by 50%.
Defaults to 1.4
highlightColor If specified, then values that are moused over will be changed to this colour instead of being lightend
tooltipContainer Specifies the DOM element that tooltips should be rendered into.
Defaults to document.body
tooltipClassname Specifies a CSS class name to apply to tooltips to override the default built-in style.
tooltipOffsetX Specifies how many pixels away from the mouse pointer to render the tooltip on the X axis
tooltipOffsetY Specifies how many pixels away from the mouse pointer to render the tooltip on the Y axis
tooltipFormatter Pass a javascript function to use as a callback to override the HTML used to generate tooltips. The callback will be passed arguments of (sparkline, options, fields).
sparkline is the sparkline object being rendered, “options” is the key:value mapping of options set for this sparkline – use options.get(key, default) to fetch an individual option. “fields” is an array of fields to render for the sparkline. This will be a single element array unless its a box plot.
tooltipChartTitle If specified then the tooltip uses the string specified by this setting as a title
tooltipFormat A format string or spformat object (or an array thereof for multiple entries) to control the format of the tooltip
tooltipPrefix A string to prepend to each field displayed in a tooltip
tooltipSuffix A string to append to each field displayed in a tooltip
tooltipSkipNull If true then null values will not have a tooltip displayed
Defaults to true
tooltipValueLookups An object or range map to map field values to tooltip strings. For example you may want to map -1, 0 and 1 to the strings “Lost”, “Draw”, “Won”
tooltipFormatFieldlist An array of values specifying which fields to display in a tooltip and in what order. Currently only useful for box plots. See below for more details
tooltipFormatFieldlistKey Specifies which key holds the field name to reference above. For box plots this should be “field”
numberFormatter Pass a javascript function to control how numbers are formatted in tooltips. The callback will be passwd a number to format and must return a string.
Default behaviour is to format numbers to western conventions.
numberDigitGroupSep Character to use for group separator in numbers “1,234” for l10n purposes.
Defaults to the comma – “,”
numberDecimalMark Character to use for the decimal point in numbers for l10n purposes.
Defaults to the period – “.”
numberDigitGroupCount Number of digits between the group seperator in numbers for l10n purposes.
Defaults to 3.

Formatting Tooltips

There are a couple of approaches you can take to format tooltips. Either you can manually generate tooltips by using the tooltipFormatter callback function (perhaps to hook in an external tooltip library), or you can use the other tooltip options above to fine-tune the default formatter.

The tooltipFormat and toolipValueLookups options provide the main methods of formatting the text displayed for each value in a toolip.

The tooltipFormat is applied whenever the mouse is moved over a value. Various fields enclosed between double curly braces in the format string are substituted depending on the type of sparkline in use. For example, the default format string for line charts is:

  <span style="color: {{color}}"></span> {{prefix}}{{y}}{{suffix}}</span>

“color” is derived from the colour of the line being drawn.
“prefix” and “suffix” and set by setting the tooltipPrefix and tooltipSuffix items.
“y” represents the y value of the point under the mouse. “x” can also be used to if useful.

The supported fields for the different types of sparklines include:

  • All types: “prefix”, “suffix” as set by tooltipPrefix and tooltipSuffix options
  • Line: “color”, “fillColor”, “x”, “y”, “isNull” (true if a null value)
  • Bar: “value” (the value under the pointer), “color”, “isNull”
  • Tristate: “value” (the value under the pointer), “color”, “isNull”
  • Discrete: “value”, “isNull”
  • Pie: “value”, “percent” (number between 0 and 100), “color” (of the moused-over slice)”
  • Bullet: “value”, “fieldkey”, “isNull”
  • Box: “field” and “value”. Field may be one of “lq” (lower quartile), “med” (median), “uq” (upper quartile), “lo” (left outlier), “ro” (right outlier), “lw” (left whisker) “rw” (right whisker)

Box plot field order

For box plots, you can control which fields are displayed and in what order using the tooltipFormatFieldlist and tooltipFormatFieldlistKey options. For example, to display only the median, lower quartile and upper quartile values, in that order:

$('.boxplot').sparkline(values, {
    type: 'box', 
    tooltipFormatFieldlist: ['med', 'lq', 'uq'], 
    tooltipFormatFieldlistKey: 'field'
});

Formatting field names and values

You can translate field names and values to other arbitrary strings using the tooltipValueLookups option. Box plots do this, for example, to remap “lq” to the string “Lower Quartile”, etc but you can also use it to map values (numbers) or ranges of values to strings too using a range map

For example, we can create a bar chart with tooltips that say “low”, “medium” or “high” along with the value:

var values = [1, 3, 5, 3, 8];
$('.bar').sparkline(values, {
    type: 'bar',
    tooltipFormat: '{{value:levels}} - {{value}}',
    tooltipValueLookups: {
        levels: $.range_map({ ':2': 'Low', '3:6': 'Medium', '7:': 'High' })
    }
});

You can also specify a CSS class name to associate with a format by passing the format string and class to $.spformat:

$('.bar').sparkline(values, {
    type: 'bar',
    tooltipFormat: $.spformat('{{value}}', 'tooltip-class')
});

Click Events

When a user clicks on a sparkline, a sparklineClick event is generated. The event object contains a property called “sparklines” that holds an array of the sparkline objects under the mouse at the time of the click. For non-composite sparklines, this array will have just one entry.

This example will display an alert with the moused-over value whenever a value is clicked:

$('.clickdemo').sparkline();
$('.clickdemo').bind('sparklineClick', function(ev) {
    var sparkline = ev.sparklines[0],
        region = sparkline.getCurrentRegionFields();
    alert("Clicked on x="+region.x+" y="+region.y);
});

The fields available from getCurrentRegionFields() match those listed in the formatting tooltips section, above.

Mouse-over Events

When the mouse moves over a different value in a sparkline a sparklineRegionChange event is generated. This can be useful to hook in an alternate tooltip library.

As with the sparklineClick event, the generated event has a property called sparklines that holds an array of the sparklines under the pointer.

Example that updates a span with the current region details: Last region:

$('.mouseoverdemo').sparkline();
$('.mouseoverdemo').bind('sparklineRegionChange', function(ev) {
    var sparkline = ev.sparklines[0],
        region = sparkline.getCurrentRegionFields(),
        value = region.y;
    $('.mouseoverregion').text("x="+region.x+" y="+region.y);
}).bind('mouseleave', function() {
    $('.mouseoverregion').text('');
});


Download: http://omnipotent.net/jquery.sparkline/#s-download

Website with examples: http://omnipotent.net/jquery.sparkline/#s-about

 


 

Flot Charts – An attractive javascript based plotting library for jQuery!

Flot – An attractive javascript based plotting library for jQuery!

Sharing one of the best available javascript/jQuery libraries for plotting charts/graphs with interactive features.

Flot is a pure JavaScript plotting library for jQuery, with a focus on simple usage, attractive looks and interactive features.

Works with Internet Explorer 6+, Chrome, Firefox 2+, Safari 3+ and Opera 9.5+

 

flot/API.md at master · flot/flot · GitHub

Introduction

Consider a call to the plot function:

var plot = $.plot(placeholder, data, options)

The placeholder is a jQuery object or DOM element or jQuery expression that the plot will be put into. This placeholder needs to have its width and height set as explained in the README (go read that now if you haven’t, it’s short). The plot will modify some properties of the placeholder so it’s recommended you simply pass in a div that you don’t use for anything else. Make sure you check any fancy styling you apply to the div, e.g. background images have been reported to be a problem on IE 7.

The plot function can also be used as a jQuery chainable property. This form naturally can’t return the plot object directly, but you can still access it via the ‘plot’ data key, like this:

var plot = $("#placeholder").plot(data, options).data("plot");

The format of the data is documented below, as is the available options. The plot object returned from the call has some methods you can call. These are documented separately below.

Note that in general Flot gives no guarantees if you change any of the objects you pass in to the plot function or get out of it since they’re not necessarily deep-copied.

Data Format

The data is an array of data series:

[ series1, series2, ... ]

A series can either be raw data or an object with properties. The raw data format is an array of points:

[ [x1, y1], [x2, y2], ... ]

E.g.

[ [1, 3], [2, 14.01], [3.5, 3.14] ]

Note that to simplify the internal logic in Flot both the x and y values must be numbers (even if specifying time series, see below for how to do this). This is a common problem because you might retrieve data from the database and serialize them directly to JSON without noticing the wrong type. If you’re getting mysterious errors, double check that you’re inputting numbers and not strings.

If a null is specified as a point or if one of the coordinates is null or couldn’t be converted to a number, the point is ignored when drawing. As a special case, a null value for lines is interpreted as a line segment end, i.e. the points before and after the null value are not connected.

Lines and points take two coordinates. For filled lines and bars, you can specify a third coordinate which is the bottom of the filled area/bar (defaults to 0).

The format of a single series object is as follows:

{
    color: color or number
    data: rawdata
    label: string
    lines: specific lines options
    bars: specific bars options
    points: specific points options
    xaxis: number
    yaxis: number
    clickable: boolean
    hoverable: boolean
    shadowSize: number
    highlightColor: color or number
}

You don’t have to specify any of them except the data, the rest are options that will get default values. Typically you’d only specify label and data, like this:

{
    label: "y = 3",
    data: [[0, 3], [10, 3]]
}

The label is used for the legend, if you don’t specify one, the series will not show up in the legend.

If you don’t specify color, the series will get a color from the auto-generated colors. The color is either a CSS color specification (like “rgb(255, 100, 123)”) or an integer that specifies which of auto-generated colors to select, e.g. 0 will get color no. 0, etc.

The latter is mostly useful if you let the user add and remove series, in which case you can hard-code the color index to prevent the colors from jumping around between the series.

The “xaxis” and “yaxis” options specify which axis to use. The axes are numbered from 1 (default), so { yaxis: 2} means that the series should be plotted against the second y axis.

“clickable” and “hoverable” can be set to false to disable interactivity for specific series if interactivity is turned on in the plot, see below.

The rest of the options are all documented below as they are the same as the default options passed in via the options parameter in the plot command. When you specify them for a specific data series, they will override the default options for the plot for that data series.

Here’s a complete example of a simple data specification:

[ { label: "Foo", data: [ [10, 1], [17, -14], [30, 5] ] },
  { label: "Bar", data: [ [11, 13], [19, 11], [30, -7] ] }
]

Plot Options

All options are completely optional. They are documented individually below, to change them you just specify them in an object, e.g.

var options = {
    series: {
        lines: { show: true },
        points: { show: true }
    }
};

$.plot(placeholder, data, options);

Customizing the legend

legend: {
    show: boolean
    labelFormatter: null or (fn: string, series object -> string)
    labelBoxBorderColor: color
    noColumns: number
    position: "ne" or "nw" or "se" or "sw"
    margin: number of pixels or [x margin, y margin]
    backgroundColor: null or color
    backgroundOpacity: number between 0 and 1
    container: null or jQuery object/DOM element/jQuery expression
    sorted: null/false, true, "ascending", "descending", "reverse", or a comparator
}

The legend is generated as a table with the data series labels and small label boxes with the color of the series. If you want to format the labels in some way, e.g. make them to links, you can pass in a function for “labelFormatter”. Here’s an example that makes them clickable:

labelFormatter: function(label, series) {
    // series is the series object for the label
    return '<a href="#' + label + '">' + label + '</a>';
}

To prevent a series from showing up in the legend, simply have the function return null.

“noColumns” is the number of columns to divide the legend table into. “position” specifies the overall placement of the legend within the plot (top-right, top-left, etc.) and margin the distance to the plot edge (this can be either a number or an array of two numbers like [x, y]). “backgroundColor” and “backgroundOpacity” specifies the background. The default is a partly transparent auto-detected background.

If you want the legend to appear somewhere else in the DOM, you can specify “container” as a jQuery object/expression to put the legend table into. The “position” and “margin” etc. options will then be ignored. Note that Flot will overwrite the contents of the container.

Legend entries appear in the same order as their series by default. If “sorted” is “reverse” then they appear in the opposite order from their series. To sort them alphabetically, you can specify true, “ascending” or “descending”, where true and “ascending” are equivalent.

You can also provide your own comparator function that accepts two objects with “label” and “color” properties, and returns zero if they are equal, a positive value if the first is greater than the second, and a negative value if the first is less than the second.

sorted: function(a, b) {
    // sort alphabetically in ascending order
    return a.label == b.label ? 0 : (
        a.label > b.label ? 1 : -1
    )
}

Customizing the axes

xaxis, yaxis: {
    show: null or true/false
    position: "bottom" or "top" or "left" or "right"
    mode: null or "time" ("time" requires jquery.flot.time.js plugin)
    timezone: null, "browser" or timezone (only makes sense for mode: "time")

    color: null or color spec
    tickColor: null or color spec
    font: null or font spec object

    min: null or number
    max: null or number
    autoscaleMargin: null or number

    transform: null or fn: number -> number
    inverseTransform: null or fn: number -> number

    ticks: null or number or ticks array or (fn: axis -> ticks array)
    tickSize: number or array
    minTickSize: number or array
    tickFormatter: (fn: number, object -> string) or string
    tickDecimals: null or number

    labelWidth: null or number
    labelHeight: null or number
    reserveSpace: null or true

    tickLength: null or number

    alignTicksWithAxis: null or number
}

All axes have the same kind of options. The following describes how to configure one axis, see below for what to do if you’ve got more than one x axis or y axis.

If you don’t set the “show” option (i.e. it is null), visibility is auto-detected, i.e. the axis will show up if there’s data associated with it. You can override this by setting the “show” option to true or false.

The “position” option specifies where the axis is placed, bottom or top for x axes, left or right for y axes. The “mode” option determines how the data is interpreted, the default of null means as decimal numbers. Use “time” for time series data; see the time series data section. The time plugin (jquery.flot.time.js) is required for time series support.

The “color” option determines the color of the line and ticks for the axis, and defaults to the grid color with transparency. For more fine-grained control you can also set the color of the ticks separately with “tickColor”.

You can customize the font and color used to draw the axis tick labels with CSS or directly via the “font” option. When “font” is null – the default – each tick label is given the ‘flot-tick-label’ class. For compatibility with Flot 0.7 and earlier the labels are also given the ‘tickLabel’ class, but this is deprecated and scheduled to be removed with the release of version 1.0.0.

To enable more granular control over styles, labels are divided between a set of text containers, with each holding the labels for one axis. These containers are given the classes ‘flot-[x|y]-axis’, and ‘flot-[x|y]#-axis’, where ‘#’ is the number of the axis when there are multiple axes. For example, the x-axis labels for a simple plot with only a single x-axis might look like this:

<div class='flot-x-axis flot-x1-axis'>
    <div class='flot-tick-label'>January 2013</div>
    ...
</div>

For direct control over label styles you can also provide “font” as an object with this format:

{
    size: 11,
    lineHeight: 13,
    style: "italic",
    weight: "bold",
    family: "sans-serif",
    variant: "small-caps",
    color: "#545454"
}

The size and lineHeight must be expressed in pixels; CSS units such as ’em’ or ‘smaller’ are not allowed.

The options “min”/”max” are the precise minimum/maximum value on the scale. If you don’t specify either of them, a value will automatically be chosen based on the minimum/maximum data values. Note that Flot always examines all the data values you feed to it, even if a restriction on another axis may make some of them invisible (this makes interactive use more stable).

The “autoscaleMargin” is a bit esoteric: it’s the fraction of margin that the scaling algorithm will add to avoid that the outermost points ends up on the grid border. Note that this margin is only applied when a min or max value is not explicitly set. If a margin is specified, the plot will furthermore extend the axis end-point to the nearest whole tick. The default value is “null” for the x axes and 0.02 for y axes which seems appropriate for most cases.

“transform” and “inverseTransform” are callbacks you can put in to change the way the data is drawn. You can design a function to compress or expand certain parts of the axis non-linearly, e.g. suppress weekends or compress far away points with a logarithm or some other means. When Flot draws the plot, each value is first put through the transform function. Here’s an example, the x axis can be turned into a natural logarithm axis with the following code:

xaxis: {
    transform: function (v) { return Math.log(v); },
    inverseTransform: function (v) { return Math.exp(v); }
}

Similarly, for reversing the y axis so the values appear in inverse order:

yaxis: {
    transform: function (v) { return -v; },
    inverseTransform: function (v) { return -v; }
}

Note that for finding extrema, Flot assumes that the transform function does not reorder values (it should be monotone).

The inverseTransform is simply the inverse of the transform function (so v == inverseTransform(transform(v)) for all relevant v). It is required for converting from canvas coordinates to data coordinates, e.g. for a mouse interaction where a certain pixel is clicked. If you don’t use any interactive features of Flot, you may not need it.

The rest of the options deal with the ticks.

If you don’t specify any ticks, a tick generator algorithm will make some for you. The algorithm has two passes. It first estimates how many ticks would be reasonable and uses this number to compute a nice round tick interval size. Then it generates the ticks.

You can specify how many ticks the algorithm aims for by setting “ticks” to a number. The algorithm always tries to generate reasonably round tick values so even if you ask for three ticks, you might get five if that fits better with the rounding. If you don’t want any ticks at all, set “ticks” to 0 or an empty array.

Another option is to skip the rounding part and directly set the tick interval size with “tickSize”. If you set it to 2, you’ll get ticks at 2, 4, 6, etc. Alternatively, you can specify that you just don’t want ticks at a size less than a specific tick size with “minTickSize”. Note that for time series, the format is an array like [2, “month”], see the next section.

If you want to completely override the tick algorithm, you can specify an array for “ticks”, either like this:

ticks: [0, 1.2, 2.4]

Or like this where the labels are also customized:

ticks: [[0, "zero"], [1.2, "one mark"], [2.4, "two marks"]]

You can mix the two if you like.

For extra flexibility you can specify a function as the “ticks” parameter. The function will be called with an object with the axis min and max and should return a ticks array. Here’s a simplistic tick generator that spits out intervals of pi, suitable for use on the x axis for trigonometric functions:

function piTickGenerator(axis) {
    var res = [], i = Math.floor(axis.min / Math.PI);
    do {
        var v = i * Math.PI;
        res.push([v, i + "\u03c0"]);
        ++i;
    } while (v < axis.max);
    return res;
}

You can control how the ticks look like with “tickDecimals”, the number of decimals to display (default is auto-detected).

Alternatively, for ultimate control over how ticks are formatted you can provide a function to “tickFormatter”. The function is passed two parameters, the tick value and an axis object with information, and should return a string. The default formatter looks like this:

function formatter(val, axis) {
    return val.toFixed(axis.tickDecimals);
}

The axis object has “min” and “max” with the range of the axis, “tickDecimals” with the number of decimals to round the value to and “tickSize” with the size of the interval between ticks as calculated by the automatic axis scaling algorithm (or specified by you). Here’s an example of a custom formatter:

function suffixFormatter(val, axis) {
    if (val > 1000000)
        return (val / 1000000).toFixed(axis.tickDecimals) + " MB";
    else if (val > 1000)
        return (val / 1000).toFixed(axis.tickDecimals) + " kB";
    else
        return val.toFixed(axis.tickDecimals) + " B";
}

“labelWidth” and “labelHeight” specifies a fixed size of the tick labels in pixels. They’re useful in case you need to align several plots. “reserveSpace” means that even if an axis isn’t shown, Flot should reserve space for it – it is useful in combination with labelWidth and labelHeight for aligning multi-axis charts.

“tickLength” is the length of the tick lines in pixels. By default, the innermost axes will have ticks that extend all across the plot, while any extra axes use small ticks. A value of null means use the default, while a number means small ticks of that length – set it to 0 to hide the lines completely.

If you set “alignTicksWithAxis” to the number of another axis, e.g. alignTicksWithAxis: 1, Flot will ensure that the autogenerated ticks of this axis are aligned with the ticks of the other axis. This may improve the looks, e.g. if you have one y axis to the left and one to the right, because the grid lines will then match the ticks in both ends. The trade-off is that the forced ticks won’t necessarily be at natural places.

Multiple axes

If you need more than one x axis or y axis, you need to specify for each data series which axis they are to use, as described under the format of the data series, e.g. { data: […], yaxis: 2 } specifies that a series should be plotted against the second y axis.

To actually configure that axis, you can’t use the xaxis/yaxis options directly – instead there are two arrays in the options:

xaxes: []
yaxes: []

Here’s an example of configuring a single x axis and two y axes (we can leave options of the first y axis empty as the defaults are fine):

{
    xaxes: [ { position: "top" } ],
    yaxes: [ { }, { position: "right", min: 20 } ]
}

The arrays get their default values from the xaxis/yaxis settings, so say you want to have all y axes start at zero, you can simply specify yaxis: { min: 0 } instead of adding a min parameter to all the axes.

Generally, the various interfaces in Flot dealing with data points either accept an xaxis/yaxis parameter to specify which axis number to use (starting from 1), or lets you specify the coordinate directly as x2/x3/… or x2axis/x3axis/… instead of “x” or “xaxis”.

Time series data

Please note that it is now required to include the time plugin, jquery.flot.time.js, for time series support.

Time series are a bit more difficult than scalar data because calendars don’t follow a simple base 10 system. For many cases, Flot abstracts most of this away, but it can still be a bit difficult to get the data into Flot. So we’ll first discuss the data format.

The time series support in Flot is based on Javascript timestamps, i.e. everywhere a time value is expected or handed over, a Javascript timestamp number is used. This is a number, not a Date object. A Javascript timestamp is the number of milliseconds since January 1, 1970 00:00:00 UTC. This is almost the same as Unix timestamps, except it’s in milliseconds, so remember to multiply by 1000!

You can see a timestamp like this

alert((new Date()).getTime())

There are different schools of thought when it comes to display of timestamps. Many will want the timestamps to be displayed according to a certain time zone, usually the time zone in which the data has been produced. Some want the localized experience, where the timestamps are displayed according to the local time of the visitor. Flot supports both. Optionally you can include a third-party library to get additional timezone support.

Default behavior is that Flot always displays timestamps according to UTC. The reason being that the core Javascript Date object does not support other fixed time zones. Often your data is at another time zone, so it may take a little bit of tweaking to work around this limitation.

The easiest way to think about it is to pretend that the data production time zone is UTC, even if it isn’t. So if you have a datapoint at 2002-02-20 08:00, you can generate a timestamp for eight o’clock UTC even if it really happened eight o’clock UTC+0200.

In PHP you can get an appropriate timestamp with:

strtotime("2002-02-20 UTC") * 1000

In Python you can get it with something like:

calendar.timegm(datetime_object.timetuple()) * 1000

In Ruby you can get it using the #to_i method on the Time object. If you’re using the active_support gem (default for Ruby on Rails applications) #to_i is also available on the DateTime and ActiveSupport::TimeWithZone objects. You simply need to multiply the result by 1000:

Time.now.to_i * 1000     # => 1383582043000
# ActiveSupport examples:
DateTime.now.to_i * 1000 # => 1383582043000
ActiveSupport::TimeZone.new('Asia/Shanghai').now.to_i * 1000
# => 1383582043000

In .NET you can get it with something like:

public static int GetJavascriptTimestamp(System.DateTime input)
{
    System.TimeSpan span = new System.TimeSpan(System.DateTime.Parse("1/1/1970").Ticks);
    System.DateTime time = input.Subtract(span);
    return (long)(time.Ticks / 10000);
}

Javascript also has some support for parsing date strings, so it is possible to generate the timestamps manually client-side.

If you’ve already got the real UTC timestamp, it’s too late to use the pretend trick described above. But you can fix up the timestamps by adding the time zone offset, e.g. for UTC+0200 you would add 2 hours to the UTC timestamp you got. Then it’ll look right on the plot. Most programming environments have some means of getting the timezone offset for a specific date (note that you need to get the offset for each individual timestamp to account for daylight savings).

The alternative with core Javascript is to interpret the timestamps according to the time zone that the visitor is in, which means that the ticks will shift with the time zone and daylight savings of each visitor. This behavior is enabled by setting the axis option “timezone” to the value “browser”.

If you need more time zone functionality than this, there is still another option. If you include the “timezone-js” library https://github.com/mde/timezone-js in the page and set axis.timezone to a value recognized by said library, Flot will use timezone-js to interpret the timestamps according to that time zone.

Once you’ve gotten the timestamps into the data and specified “time” as the axis mode, Flot will automatically generate relevant ticks and format them. As always, you can tweak the ticks via the “ticks” option

  • just remember that the values should be timestamps (numbers), not Date objects.

Tick generation and formatting can also be controlled separately through the following axis options:

minTickSize: array
timeformat: null or format string
monthNames: null or array of size 12 of strings
dayNames: null or array of size 7 of strings
twelveHourClock: boolean

Here “timeformat” is a format string to use. You might use it like this:

xaxis: {
    mode: "time",
    timeformat: "%Y/%m/%d"
}

This will result in tick labels like “2000/12/24”. A subset of the standard strftime specifiers are supported (plus the nonstandard %q):

%a: weekday name (customizable)
%b: month name (customizable)
%d: day of month, zero-padded (01-31)
%e: day of month, space-padded ( 1-31)
%H: hours, 24-hour time, zero-padded (00-23)
%I: hours, 12-hour time, zero-padded (01-12)
%m: month, zero-padded (01-12)
%M: minutes, zero-padded (00-59)
%q: quarter (1-4)
%S: seconds, zero-padded (00-59)
%y: year (two digits)
%Y: year (four digits)
%p: am/pm
%P: AM/PM (uppercase version of %p)
%w: weekday as number (0-6, 0 being Sunday)

Flot 0.8 switched from %h to the standard %H hours specifier. The %h specifier is still available, for backwards-compatibility, but is deprecated and scheduled to be removed permanently with the release of version 1.0.

You can customize the month names with the “monthNames” option. For instance, for Danish you might specify:

monthNames: ["jan", "feb", "mar", "apr", "maj", "jun", "jul", "aug", "sep", "okt", "nov", "dec"]

Similarly you can customize the weekday names with the “dayNames” option. An example in French:

dayNames: ["dim", "lun", "mar", "mer", "jeu", "ven", "sam"]

If you set “twelveHourClock” to true, the autogenerated timestamps will use 12 hour AM/PM timestamps instead of 24 hour. This only applies if you have not set “timeformat”. Use the “%I” and “%p” or “%P” options if you want to build your own format string with 12-hour times.

If the Date object has a strftime property (and it is a function), it will be used instead of the built-in formatter. Thus you can include a strftime library such as http://hacks.bluesmoon.info/strftime/ for more powerful date/time formatting.

If everything else fails, you can control the formatting by specifying a custom tick formatter function as usual. Here’s a simple example which will format December 24 as 24/12:

tickFormatter: function (val, axis) {
    var d = new Date(val);
    return d.getUTCDate() + "/" + (d.getUTCMonth() + 1);
}

Note that for the time mode “tickSize” and “minTickSize” are a bit special in that they are arrays on the form “[value, unit]” where unit is one of “second”, “minute”, “hour”, “day”, “month” and “year”. So you can specify

minTickSize: [1, "month"]

to get a tick interval size of at least 1 month and correspondingly, if axis.tickSize is [2, “day”] in the tick formatter, the ticks have been produced with two days in-between.

Customizing the data series

series: {
    lines, points, bars: {
        show: boolean
        lineWidth: number
        fill: boolean or number
        fillColor: null or color/gradient
    }

    lines, bars: {
        zero: boolean
    }

    points: {
        radius: number
        symbol: "circle" or function
    }

    bars: {
        barWidth: number
        align: "left", "right" or "center"
        horizontal: boolean
    }

    lines: {
        steps: boolean
    }

    shadowSize: number
    highlightColor: color or number
}

colors: [ color1, color2, ... ]

The options inside “series: {}” are copied to each of the series. So you can specify that all series should have bars by putting it in the global options, or override it for individual series by specifying bars in a particular the series object in the array of data.

The most important options are “lines”, “points” and “bars” that specify whether and how lines, points and bars should be shown for each data series. In case you don’t specify anything at all, Flot will default to showing lines (you can turn this off with lines: { show: false }). You can specify the various types independently of each other, and Flot will happily draw each of them in turn (this is probably only useful for lines and points), e.g.

var options = {
    series: {
        lines: { show: true, fill: true, fillColor: "rgba(255, 255, 255, 0.8)" },
        points: { show: true, fill: false }
    }
};

“lineWidth” is the thickness of the line or outline in pixels. You can set it to 0 to prevent a line or outline from being drawn; this will also hide the shadow.

“fill” is whether the shape should be filled. For lines, this produces area graphs. You can use “fillColor” to specify the color of the fill. If “fillColor” evaluates to false (default for everything except points which are filled with white), the fill color is auto-set to the color of the data series. You can adjust the opacity of the fill by setting fill to a number between 0 (fully transparent) and 1 (fully opaque).

For bars, fillColor can be a gradient, see the gradient documentation below. “barWidth” is the width of the bars in units of the x axis (or the y axis if “horizontal” is true), contrary to most other measures that are specified in pixels. For instance, for time series the unit is milliseconds so 24 * 60 * 60 * 1000 produces bars with the width of a day. “align” specifies whether a bar should be left-aligned (default), right-aligned or centered on top of the value it represents. When “horizontal” is on, the bars are drawn horizontally, i.e. from the y axis instead of the x axis; note that the bar end points are still defined in the same way so you’ll probably want to swap the coordinates if you’ve been plotting vertical bars first.

Area and bar charts normally start from zero, regardless of the data’s range. This is because they convey information through size, and starting from a different value would distort their meaning. In cases where the fill is purely for decorative purposes, however, “zero” allows you to override this behavior. It defaults to true for filled lines and bars; setting it to false tells the series to use the same automatic scaling as an un-filled line.

For lines, “steps” specifies whether two adjacent data points are connected with a straight (possibly diagonal) line or with first a horizontal and then a vertical line. Note that this transforms the data by adding extra points.

For points, you can specify the radius and the symbol. The only built-in symbol type is circles, for other types you can use a plugin or define them yourself by specifying a callback:

function cross(ctx, x, y, radius, shadow) {
    var size = radius * Math.sqrt(Math.PI) / 2;
    ctx.moveTo(x - size, y - size);
    ctx.lineTo(x + size, y + size);
    ctx.moveTo(x - size, y + size);
    ctx.lineTo(x + size, y - size);
}

The parameters are the drawing context, x and y coordinates of the center of the point, a radius which corresponds to what the circle would have used and whether the call is to draw a shadow (due to limited canvas support, shadows are currently faked through extra draws). It’s good practice to ensure that the area covered by the symbol is the same as for the circle with the given radius, this ensures that all symbols have approximately the same visual weight.

“shadowSize” is the default size of shadows in pixels. Set it to 0 to remove shadows.

“highlightColor” is the default color of the translucent overlay used to highlight the series when the mouse hovers over it.

The “colors” array specifies a default color theme to get colors for the data series from. You can specify as many colors as you like, like this:

colors: ["#d18b2c", "#dba255", "#919733"]

If there are more data series than colors, Flot will try to generate extra colors by lightening and darkening colors in the theme.

Customizing the grid

grid: {
    show: boolean
    aboveData: boolean
    color: color
    backgroundColor: color/gradient or null
    margin: number or margin object
    labelMargin: number
    axisMargin: number
    markings: array of markings or (fn: axes -> array of markings)
    borderWidth: number or object with "top", "right", "bottom" and "left" properties with different widths
    borderColor: color or null or object with "top", "right", "bottom" and "left" properties with different colors
    minBorderMargin: number or null
    clickable: boolean
    hoverable: boolean
    autoHighlight: boolean
    mouseActiveRadius: number
}

interaction: {
    redrawOverlayInterval: number or -1
}

The grid is the thing with the axes and a number of ticks. Many of the things in the grid are configured under the individual axes, but not all. “color” is the color of the grid itself whereas “backgroundColor” specifies the background color inside the grid area, here null means that the background is transparent. You can also set a gradient, see the gradient documentation below.

You can turn off the whole grid including tick labels by setting “show” to false. “aboveData” determines whether the grid is drawn above the data or below (below is default).

“margin” is the space in pixels between the canvas edge and the grid, which can be either a number or an object with individual margins for each side, in the form:

margin: {
    top: top margin in pixels
    left: left margin in pixels
    bottom: bottom margin in pixels
    right: right margin in pixels
}

“labelMargin” is the space in pixels between tick labels and axis line, and “axisMargin” is the space in pixels between axes when there are two next to each other.

“borderWidth” is the width of the border around the plot. Set it to 0 to disable the border. Set it to an object with “top”, “right”, “bottom” and “left” properties to use different widths. You can also set “borderColor” if you want the border to have a different color than the grid lines. Set it to an object with “top”, “right”, “bottom” and “left” properties to use different colors. “minBorderMargin” controls the default minimum margin around the border – it’s used to make sure that points aren’t accidentally clipped by the canvas edge so by default the value is computed from the point radius.

“markings” is used to draw simple lines and rectangular areas in the background of the plot. You can either specify an array of ranges on the form { xaxis: { from, to }, yaxis: { from, to } } (with multiple axes, you can specify coordinates for other axes instead, e.g. as x2axis/x3axis/…) or with a function that returns such an array given the axes for the plot in an object as the first parameter.

You can set the color of markings by specifying “color” in the ranges object. Here’s an example array:

markings: [ { xaxis: { from: 0, to: 2 }, yaxis: { from: 10, to: 10 }, color: "#bb0000" }, ... ]

If you leave out one of the values, that value is assumed to go to the border of the plot. So for example if you only specify { xaxis: { from: 0, to: 2 } } it means an area that extends from the top to the bottom of the plot in the x range 0-2.

A line is drawn if from and to are the same, e.g.

markings: [ { yaxis: { from: 1, to: 1 } }, ... ]

would draw a line parallel to the x axis at y = 1. You can control the line width with “lineWidth” in the range object.

An example function that makes vertical stripes might look like this:

markings: function (axes) {
    var markings = [];
    for (var x = Math.floor(axes.xaxis.min); x < axes.xaxis.max; x += 2)
        markings.push({ xaxis: { from: x, to: x + 1 } });
    return markings;
}

If you set “clickable” to true, the plot will listen for click events on the plot area and fire a “plotclick” event on the placeholder with a position and a nearby data item object as parameters. The coordinates are available both in the unit of the axes (not in pixels) and in global screen coordinates.

Likewise, if you set “hoverable” to true, the plot will listen for mouse move events on the plot area and fire a “plothover” event with the same parameters as the “plotclick” event. If “autoHighlight” is true (the default), nearby data items are highlighted automatically. If needed, you can disable highlighting and control it yourself with the highlight/unhighlight plot methods described elsewhere.

You can use “plotclick” and “plothover” events like this:

$.plot($("#placeholder"), [ d ], { grid: { clickable: true } });

$("#placeholder").bind("plotclick", function (event, pos, item) {
    alert("You clicked at " + pos.x + ", " + pos.y);
    // axis coordinates for other axes, if present, are in pos.x2, pos.x3, ...
    // if you need global screen coordinates, they are pos.pageX, pos.pageY

    if (item) {
        highlight(item.series, item.datapoint);
        alert("You clicked a point!");
    }
});

The item object in this example is either null or a nearby object on the form:

item: {
    datapoint: the point, e.g. [0, 2]
    dataIndex: the index of the point in the data array
    series: the series object
    seriesIndex: the index of the series
    pageX, pageY: the global screen coordinates of the point
}

For instance, if you have specified the data like this

$.plot($("#placeholder"), [ { label: "Foo", data: [[0, 10], [7, 3]] } ], ...);

and the mouse is near the point (7, 3), “datapoint” is [7, 3], “dataIndex” will be 1, “series” is a normalized series object with among other things the “Foo” label in series.label and the color in series.color, and “seriesIndex” is 0. Note that plugins and options that transform the data can shift the indexes from what you specified in the original data array.

If you use the above events to update some other information and want to clear out that info in case the mouse goes away, you’ll probably also need to listen to “mouseout” events on the placeholder div.

“mouseActiveRadius” specifies how far the mouse can be from an item and still activate it. If there are two or more points within this radius, Flot chooses the closest item. For bars, the top-most bar (from the latest specified data series) is chosen.

If you want to disable interactivity for a specific data series, you can set “hoverable” and “clickable” to false in the options for that series, like this:

{ data: [...], label: "Foo", clickable: false }

“redrawOverlayInterval” specifies the maximum time to delay a redraw of interactive things (this works as a rate limiting device). The default is capped to 60 frames per second. You can set it to -1 to disable the rate limiting.

Specifying gradients

A gradient is specified like this:

{ colors: [ color1, color2, ... ] }

For instance, you might specify a background on the grid going from black to gray like this:

grid: {
    backgroundColor: { colors: ["#000", "#999"] }
}

For the series you can specify the gradient as an object that specifies the scaling of the brightness and the opacity of the series color, e.g.

{ colors: [{ opacity: 0.8 }, { brightness: 0.6, opacity: 0.8 } ] }

where the first color simply has its alpha scaled, whereas the second is also darkened. For instance, for bars the following makes the bars gradually disappear, without outline:

bars: {
    show: true,
    lineWidth: 0,
    fill: true,
    fillColor: { colors: [ { opacity: 0.8 }, { opacity: 0.1 } ] }
}

Flot currently only supports vertical gradients drawn from top to bottom because that’s what works with IE.

Plot Methods

The Plot object returned from the plot function has some methods you can call:

  • highlight(series, datapoint)Highlight a specific datapoint in the data series. You can either specify the actual objects, e.g. if you got them from a “plotclick” event, or you can specify the indices, e.g. highlight(1, 3) to highlight the fourth point in the second series (remember, zero-based indexing).
  • unhighlight(series, datapoint) or unhighlight()Remove the highlighting of the point, same parameters as highlight.If you call unhighlight with no parameters, e.g. as plot.unhighlight(), all current highlights are removed.
  • setData(data)You can use this to reset the data used. Note that axis scaling, ticks, legend etc. will not be recomputed (use setupGrid() to do that). You’ll probably want to call draw() afterwards.You can use this function to speed up redrawing a small plot if you know that the axes won’t change. Put in the new data with setData(newdata), call draw(), and you’re good to go. Note that for large datasets, almost all the time is consumed in draw() plotting the data so in this case don’t bother.
  • setupGrid()Recalculate and set axis scaling, ticks, legend etc.Note that because of the drawing model of the canvas, this function will immediately redraw (actually reinsert in the DOM) the labels and the legend, but not the actual tick lines because they’re drawn on the canvas. You need to call draw() to get the canvas redrawn.
  • draw()Redraws the plot canvas.
  • triggerRedrawOverlay()Schedules an update of an overlay canvas used for drawing interactive things like a selection and point highlights. This is mostly useful for writing plugins. The redraw doesn’t happen immediately, instead a timer is set to catch multiple successive redraws (e.g. from a mousemove). You can get to the overlay by setting up a drawOverlay hook.
  • width()/height()Gets the width and height of the plotting area inside the grid. This is smaller than the canvas or placeholder dimensions as some extra space is needed (e.g. for labels).
  • offset()Returns the offset of the plotting area inside the grid relative to the document, useful for instance for calculating mouse positions (event.pageX/Y minus this offset is the pixel position inside the plot).
  • pointOffset({ x: xpos, y: ypos })Returns the calculated offset of the data point at (x, y) in data space within the placeholder div. If you are working with multiple axes, you can specify the x and y axis references, e.g.
      o = pointOffset({ x: xpos, y: ypos, xaxis: 2, yaxis: 3 })
      // o.left and o.top now contains the offset within the div
  • resize()Tells Flot to resize the drawing canvas to the size of the placeholder. You need to run setupGrid() and draw() afterwards as canvas resizing is a destructive operation. This is used internally by the resize plugin.
  • shutdown()Cleans up any event handlers Flot has currently registered. This is used internally.

There are also some members that let you peek inside the internal workings of Flot which is useful in some cases. Note that if you change something in the objects returned, you’re changing the objects used by Flot to keep track of its state, so be careful.

  • getData()Returns an array of the data series currently used in normalized form with missing settings filled in according to the global options. So for instance to find out what color Flot has assigned to the data series, you could do this:
    var series = plot.getData();
    for (var i = 0; i < series.length; ++i)
        alert(series[i].color);

    A notable other interesting field besides color is datapoints which has a field “points” with the normalized data points in a flat array (the field “pointsize” is the increment in the flat array to get to the next point so for a dataset consisting only of (x,y) pairs it would be 2).

  • getAxes()Gets an object with the axes. The axes are returned as the attributes of the object, so for instance getAxes().xaxis is the x axis.Various things are stuffed inside an axis object, e.g. you could use getAxes().xaxis.ticks to find out what the ticks are for the xaxis. Two other useful attributes are p2c and c2p, functions for transforming from data point space to the canvas plot space and back. Both returns values that are offset with the plot offset. Check the Flot source code for the complete set of attributes (or output an axis with console.log() and inspect it).With multiple axes, the extra axes are returned as x2axis, x3axis, etc., e.g. getAxes().y2axis is the second y axis. You can check y2axis.used to see whether the axis is associated with any data points and y2axis.show to see if it is currently shown.
  • getPlaceholder()Returns placeholder that the plot was put into. This can be useful for plugins for adding DOM elements or firing events.
  • getCanvas()Returns the canvas used for drawing in case you need to hack on it yourself. You’ll probably need to get the plot offset too.
  • getPlotOffset()Gets the offset that the grid has within the canvas as an object with distances from the canvas edges as “left”, “right”, “top”, “bottom”. I.e., if you draw a circle on the canvas with the center placed at (left, top), its center will be at the top-most, left corner of the grid.
  • getOptions()Gets the options for the plot, normalized, with default values filled in. You get a reference to actual values used by Flot, so if you modify the values in here, Flot will use the new values. If you change something, you probably have to call draw() or setupGrid() or triggerRedrawOverlay() to see the change.

Hooks

In addition to the public methods, the Plot object also has some hooks that can be used to modify the plotting process. You can install a callback function at various points in the process, the function then gets access to the internal data structures in Flot.

Here’s an overview of the phases Flot goes through:

  1. Plugin initialization, parsing options
  2. Constructing the canvases used for drawing
  3. Set data: parsing data specification, calculating colors, copying raw data points into internal format, normalizing them, finding max/min for axis auto-scaling
  4. Grid setup: calculating axis spacing, ticks, inserting tick labels, the legend
  5. Draw: drawing the grid, drawing each of the series in turn
  6. Setting up event handling for interactive features
  7. Responding to events, if any
  8. Shutdown: this mostly happens in case a plot is overwritten

Each hook is simply a function which is put in the appropriate array. You can add them through the “hooks” option, and they are also available after the plot is constructed as the “hooks” attribute on the returned plot object, e.g.

  // define a simple draw hook
  function hellohook(plot, canvascontext) { alert("hello!"); };

  // pass it in, in an array since we might want to specify several
  var plot = $.plot(placeholder, data, { hooks: { draw: [hellohook] } });

  // we can now find it again in plot.hooks.draw[0] unless a plugin
  // has added other hooks

The available hooks are described below. All hook callbacks get the plot object as first parameter. You can find some examples of defined hooks in the plugins bundled with Flot.

  • processOptions [phase 1]function(plot, options)Called after Flot has parsed and merged options. Useful in the instance where customizations beyond simple merging of default values is needed. A plugin might use it to detect that it has been enabled and then turn on or off other options.
  • processRawData [phase 3]function(plot, series, data, datapoints)Called before Flot copies and normalizes the raw data for the given series. If the function fills in datapoints.points with normalized points and sets datapoints.pointsize to the size of the points, Flot will skip the copying/normalization step for this series.In any case, you might be interested in setting datapoints.format, an array of objects for specifying how a point is normalized and how it interferes with axis scaling. It accepts the following options:
    {
        x, y: boolean,
        number: boolean,
        required: boolean,
        defaultValue: value,
        autoscale: boolean
    }

    “x” and “y” specify whether the value is plotted against the x or y axis, and is currently used only to calculate axis min-max ranges. The default format array, for example, looks like this:

    [
        { x: true, number: true, required: true },
        { y: true, number: true, required: true }
    ]

    This indicates that a point, i.e. [0, 25], consists of two values, with the first being plotted on the x axis and the second on the y axis.

    If “number” is true, then the value must be numeric, and is set to null if it cannot be converted to a number.

    “defaultValue” provides a fallback in case the original value is null. This is for instance handy for bars, where one can omit the third coordinate (the bottom of the bar), which then defaults to zero.

    If “required” is true, then the value must exist (be non-null) for the point as a whole to be valid. If no value is provided, then the entire point is cleared out with nulls, turning it into a gap in the series.

    “autoscale” determines whether the value is considered when calculating an automatic min-max range for the axes that the value is plotted against.

  • processDatapoints [phase 3]function(plot, series, datapoints)Called after normalization of the given series but before finding min/max of the data points. This hook is useful for implementing data transformations. “datapoints” contains the normalized data points in a flat array as datapoints.points with the size of a single point given in datapoints.pointsize. Here’s a simple transform that multiplies all y coordinates by 2:
    function multiply(plot, series, datapoints) {
        var points = datapoints.points, ps = datapoints.pointsize;
        for (var i = 0; i < points.length; i += ps)
            points[i + 1] *= 2;
    }

    Note that you must leave datapoints in a good condition as Flot doesn’t check it or do any normalization on it afterwards.

  • processOffset [phase 4]function(plot, offset)Called after Flot has initialized the plot’s offset, but before it draws any axes or plot elements. This hook is useful for customizing the margins between the grid and the edge of the canvas. “offset” is an object with attributes “top”, “bottom”, “left” and “right”, corresponding to the margins on the four sides of the plot.
  • drawBackground [phase 5]function(plot, canvascontext)Called before all other drawing operations. Used to draw backgrounds or other custom elements before the plot or axes have been drawn.
  • drawSeries [phase 5]function(plot, canvascontext, series)Hook for custom drawing of a single series. Called just before the standard drawing routine has been called in the loop that draws each series.
  • draw [phase 5]function(plot, canvascontext)Hook for drawing on the canvas. Called after the grid is drawn (unless it’s disabled or grid.aboveData is set) and the series have been plotted (in case any points, lines or bars have been turned on). For examples of how to draw things, look at the source code.
  • bindEvents [phase 6]function(plot, eventHolder)Called after Flot has setup its event handlers. Should set any necessary event handlers on eventHolder, a jQuery object with the canvas, e.g.
    function (plot, eventHolder) {
        eventHolder.mousedown(function (e) {
            alert("You pressed the mouse at " + e.pageX + " " + e.pageY);
        });
    }

    Interesting events include click, mousemove, mouseup/down. You can use all jQuery events. Usually, the event handlers will update the state by drawing something (add a drawOverlay hook and call triggerRedrawOverlay) or firing an externally visible event for user code. See the crosshair plugin for an example.

    Currently, eventHolder actually contains both the static canvas used for the plot itself and the overlay canvas used for interactive features because some versions of IE get the stacking order wrong. The hook only gets one event, though (either for the overlay or for the static canvas).

    Note that custom plot events generated by Flot are not generated on eventHolder, but on the div placeholder supplied as the first argument to the plot call. You can get that with plot.getPlaceholder() – that’s probably also the one you should use if you need to fire a custom event.

  • drawOverlay [phase 7]function (plot, canvascontext)The drawOverlay hook is used for interactive things that need a canvas to draw on. The model currently used by Flot works the way that an extra overlay canvas is positioned on top of the static canvas. This overlay is cleared and then completely redrawn whenever something interesting happens. This hook is called when the overlay canvas is to be redrawn.”canvascontext” is the 2D context of the overlay canvas. You can use this to draw things. You’ll most likely need some of the metrics computed by Flot, e.g. plot.width()/plot.height(). See the crosshair plugin for an example.
  • shutdown [phase 8]function (plot, eventHolder)Run when plot.shutdown() is called, which usually only happens in case a plot is overwritten by a new plot. If you’re writing a plugin that adds extra DOM elements or event handlers, you should add a callback to clean up after you. Take a look at the section in the PLUGINS document for more info.

Plugins

Plugins extend the functionality of Flot. To use a plugin, simply include its Javascript file after Flot in the HTML page.

If you’re worried about download size/latency, you can concatenate all the plugins you use, and Flot itself for that matter, into one big file (make sure you get the order right), then optionally run it through a Javascript minifier such as YUI Compressor.

Here’s a brief explanation of how the plugin plumbings work:

Each plugin registers itself in the global array $.plot.plugins. When you make a new plot object with $.plot, Flot goes through this array calling the “init” function of each plugin and merging default options from the “option” attribute of the plugin. The init function gets a reference to the plot object created and uses this to register hooks and add new public methods if needed.

See the PLUGINS document for details on how to write a plugin. As the above description hints, it’s actually pretty easy.

Version number

The version number of Flot is available in $.plot.version

 


 

Demo/Examples: http://www.flotcharts.org/flot/examples/

Source: https://github.com/flot/flot/blob/master/API.md

Website: http://www.flotcharts.org/

 


 

Thanks for reading,
SABIT SOLUTIONS

Fuel UX – extends Bootstrap with additional lightweight JavaScript controls for your web applications.

Fuel UX extends Bootstrap with additional lightweight JavaScript controls for your web applications.

Ignite your Bootstrap project today.

Include Fuel UX controls in your next web project knowing it’s solidly optimized and easy to upgrade.

Fuel UX is open source. It’s hosted, developed, and maintained on GitHub. It provides controls, extensions and online drag & drop form builder.

50 Must-have plugins for extending Twitter Bootstrap | Tutorialzine

Fuel UX is an incredible collection of enhancements to Twitter Bootstrap. All the controls are clean and lightweight, and they fit naturally into the bootstrap look and feel. The collection includes controls like datagrids, custom select boxes, spinners, trees, multi-step form wizards and more

Fuel UX

// // <!– –>

Quick Start

This will get you from nothing to done in no time flat (it assumes use of the Fuel UX CDN). To use a downloaded version and for more detailed documentation see the further sections below.

    1. Add the fueluxclass to a page wrapper (usually either <html> tag or <body> tag)
<body class="fuelux">
  1. Include the CSS on your page somewhere:
    <link href="//maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.2.0/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
    <link href="//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/css/fuelux.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
  2. Include the JS on your page somewhere:
    <!-- jQuery -->
    <script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.0/jquery.js"></script>
    <!-- Include all compiled plugins (below), or include individual files as needed -->
    <script src="//maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.2.0/js/bootstrap.min.js"></script>
    <script src="//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/js/fuelux.min.js"></script>

    (or AMD):

    <script src="//cdn.jsdelivr.net/requirejs/2.1.11/require.js"></script>
    <script>
      requirejs.config({
        paths: {
          'bootstrap': '//maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.2.0/js/bootstrap.min',
          'fuelux': '//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/js/fuelux.min',
          'jquery': '//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.0/jquery',
          // Moment.js is optional
          'moment': '//cdn.jsdelivr.net/momentjs/2.6.0/lang-all.min'
        },
        // Bootstrap is a "browser globals" script :-(
        shim: { 'bootstrap': { deps: ['jquery'] } }
      });
      // Require all.js or include individual files as needed
      require(['jquery', 'bootstrap', 'fuelux'], function($){});
    </script>
  3. Proceed with the awesome

Get Fuel UX

Currently v3.5.0

Use the Fuel UX CDN

The quickest, easiest, most magical way to get Fuel UX is to let us host it for you from our CDN!

This will require you to manage your own dependencies. If that scares you, you could use bower to have that taken care of for you.

<!-- Latest compiled and minified CSS -->
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/css/fuelux.min.css">

    <!-- Latest compiled and minified JavaScript -->
    <script src="//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/js/fuelux.min.js"></script>

Install with Bower or Volo

If you use a dependency manager to manage your front-end code, this method may be right for you. This method ensures you receive all the dependencies you might need, such as jQuery, Bootstap, moment.js (for extended date support), and requireJS (for AMD support).

Using Bower:

bower install fuelux

Update with bower update fuelux.

Using Volo:

volo add fuelux

Update with volo add -f fuelux.

Fork You

Fork on Github

If you need to make some customizations, this is your best option. It will allow you to merge in future changes from upstream (that’s us!) without overwriting your awesomeness.

git clone https://github.com/ExactTarget/fuelux/

Templates

No AMD/UMD Template

This template utlizes CDNs, but no AMD.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <meta charset="utf-8">
    <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
    <title>Fuel UX Basic Template (Globals)</title>
    <!-- CSS -->
    <link href="//maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.2.0/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
    <link href="//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/css/fuelux.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
  </head>
  <body class="fuelux">
    <!-- Checkbox example -->
    <div class="checkbox">
      <label class="checkbox-custom" data-initialize="checkbox">
        <input class="sr-only" data-toggle="#hereKittyKitty" type="checkbox" value="option1">
        <span class="checkbox-label">I love kittens!</span>
      </label>
    </div>
    <div id="hereKittyKitty" class="alert bg-info">Great. Meow, too!</div>

    <!-- jQuery -->
    <script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.0/jquery.js"></script>
    <!-- Include all compiled plugins (below), or include individual files as needed -->
    <script src="//maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.2.0/js/bootstrap.min.js"></script>
    <script src="//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/js/fuelux.min.js"></script>
  </body>
</html>

AMD/UMD Template

This template utlizes CDNs and AMD modules (with a manager such as require.js) and bundling for production:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <meta charset="utf-8">
    <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
    <title>Fuel UX Basic Template (AMD)</title>
    <!-- CSS -->
    <link href="//maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.2.0/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
    <link href="//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/css/fuelux.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
    <!-- Require.js - AMD loader -->
    <script src="//cdn.jsdelivr.net/requirejs/2.1.11/require.js"></script>
    <script>
      requirejs.config({
        paths: {
          'bootstrap': '//maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.2.0/js/bootstrap.min',
          'fuelux': '//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/js/fuelux.min',
          'jquery': '//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.0/jquery',
          // Moment.js is optional
          'moment': '//cdn.jsdelivr.net/momentjs/2.6.0/lang-all.min'
        },
        // Bootstrap is a "browser globals" script :-(
        shim: { 'bootstrap': { deps: ['jquery'] } }
      });
      // Require all.js or include individual files as needed
      require(['jquery', 'bootstrap', 'fuelux'], function($){});
    </script>
  </head>
  <body class="fuelux">
    <!-- Checkbox example -->
    <div class="checkbox">
      <label class="checkbox-custom" data-initialize="checkbox">
        <input class="sr-only" type="checkbox" value="option1" data-toggle="#hereKittyKitty">
        <span class="checkbox-label">I love kittens.</span>
      </label>
    </div>
    <div id="hereKittyKitty" class="alert bg-info">Great. Meow, too!</div>
  </body>
</html>

AMD/UMD Template, no CDN

This template does not utilize CDNs. It does utilize AMD modules (with a manager such as require.js) and bundling for production. Your setup will probably be different (This is a sample taken from fuelux-boilerplate project):

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <meta charset="utf-8">
    <meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
    <title>Fuel UX Basic Template (AMD) No CDN</title>

    <link href="bower_components/bootstrap/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
    <link href="bower_components/fuelux/dist/css/fuelux.min.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="css/main.min.css">

    <script src="bower_components/requirejs/require.js"></script>
    <script>
      (function () {
        require.config({
          config: {
            moment: {
              noGlobal: true
            }
          },
          paths: {
            jquery: 'bower_components/jquery-1.11.0/dist/jquery.min',
            bootstrap: 'bower_components/bootstrap/dist/js/bootstrap.min',
            fuelux: 'bower_components/fuelux/js',//Proper UMD/AMD to enable you to get just what you need (goes w/line 33)
            // fuelux: 'bower_components/fuelux/dist/js/fuelux.min',//just grab it all (goes w/line 34)
            moment: 'bower_components/moment/min/moment-with-langs.min', // comment out if you dont want momentjs to be default
            underscore: 'bower_components/underscore/underscore'
          },
          shim: { 'bootstrap': { deps: ['jquery'] } }
        });
        require(['fuelux/checkbox']);//get just what you need (goes w/line 26)
        // require(['fuelux']);//just grab it all (goes w/line 27)
      })();
    </script>
  </head>
  <body class="fuelux">
    <label class="checkbox-custom checkbox-inline" data-initialize="checkbox"  id="confirmation">
      <input class="sr-only" type="checkbox" value="Should load in a 6 wide column, offset by 3 col widths"> <span class="checkbox-label">It worked</span>
    </label>
  </body>
</html>

UMD/AMD Support

If you use AMD (such as RequireJS), we recommend only loading the controls you need (e.g.- fuelux/checkbox).

  1. Reference the Fuel UX directory in your paths configuration, wherever it is located:
    require.config({
            paths: {
                'fuelux': '//www.fuelcdn.com/fuelux/3.5.0/js/fuelux.min.js'
                //...
            }
        });
    
  2. List individual fuelux controls needed as dependencies within your application modules:
    define(function(require) {
        var spinbox = require('fuelux/spinbox');
        //...
    });
    

    In instances where you require every module from fuel ux, you can use fuelux/all instead of listing each module individually.

    Fuel UX also supports placing components in their own <script> tags. Be sure to check component dependencies in the controls documentation and put modules in the correct order if you load them in this method. Errors will appear in the console if you have not loaded dependencies correctly.

    The following components have dependencies:

Migrating from v2.x to v3.x

Interested in migrating from an older version of Fuel UX to v3.x? Check out our migration guide.

Bugs and feature requests

Have a bug or a feature request? Please first review the open issues, then search for existing and closed issues. If your problem or idea is not addressed yet, please open a new issue.

You can visit Code@ for general information and search Fuel UX tagged questions on StackOverflow.

Previous releases

While we will still maintain the 2.6.x version (bug fixes only), it’s deprecated. The Fuel UX 2.x documentation has moved and a legacy branch has been created. We’ll leave the Fuel UX 2.x branch up and available for the foreseeable future.

Contributing

Stay up to date on the development of Fuel UX and reach out to others in the community with these helpful resources.

  • Before writing code, we suggest you search for issues or create a new one to confirm where your contribution fits into our roadmap.
  • In lieu of a formal style guide, take care to maintain the existing coding style, including the following:
    • tabs
    • clarity over brevity
    • declarative markup
    • semicolons

    Be sure to add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using grunt.

  • Read more about contributing to Fuel UX
  • Please do not edit files in the dist directory, as we generate those files via grunt. Find source code in the respective js, less, and fonts directory.
  • While grunt can run the included unit tests via PhantomJS, ensure that you run tests across a variety of browsers and environments. View the test page at http://localhost:8000/test/ in as many of the browsers listed in sauce_browsers.yml as you can before contributing.

Browser and device support

Fuel UX is built to work best in the latest desktop and mobile browsers, meaning older browsers might display differently styled, though fully functional renderings of Fuel UX controls.

Supported browsers

The ExactTarget Marketing Cloud supports the latest versions of the following browsers and platforms. On Windows, we additionally support Internet Explorer, versions 8 through 11. Review more specific support information below:

Chrome Firefox Internet Explorer Opera Safari
Android Supported Not Supported N/A Not Supported N/A
iOS Supported N/A Not Supported Supported
Mac OS X Supported Supported Supported Supported
Windows Supported Supported Supported Supported Not Supported

While Fuel UX should look and behave well in Chromium and Chrome for Linux and Firefox for Linux, Fuel UX does not officially support these browsers.

Internet Explorer 8 and 9

While Fuel UX supports Internet Explorer 8 and 9, please be aware that these browsers do not fully support some CSS3 properties and HTML5 elements. In addition, Internet Explorer 8 requires the use of fixed-width columns and containers due to its lack of media-query support. You may try using Modernizr or conditional comments like <!--[if IE 8]> to style fixed-width containers.

Visit Can I use… for details on browser support of CSS3 and HTML5 features.

 

FORM BUILDER: http://getfuelux.com/formbuilder.html

Website: http://getfuelux.com

 

Thanks for reading,
SABIT SOLUTIONS

 

Full Calender – An open source JavaScript event calendar with customization

Full Calender – An open source JavaScript event calendar with customization

FullCalendar is a jQuery plugin that provides a full-sized, drag & drop event calendar like the one below. It uses AJAX to fetch events on-the-fly and is easily configured to use your own feed format. It is visually customizable with a rich API.

Simple WYSIWYG Rich Content Editor with no dependencies (WYSIWYG.JS)

Simple WYSIWYG Rich Content Editor with no dependencies (WYSIWYG.JS)

WYSIWYG.js is a (minified) 12k contenteditable-editor with no dependencies.

It does only:
* Transforms any HTML-element into contenteditable
* onselection-event: e.g. to open a toolbar
* onkeypress-event: e.g. to handle hotkeys
* onplaceholder-event: show/hide a placeholder
* .bold(), .forecolor(), .inserthtml(), … functions

 

It works with:
* Internet Explorer 6+
* Firefox 3.5+
* Chrome 4+
* Safari 3.1+

If a <textarea> was used as ‘element’, the library:
* keeps the <textarea> in sync
* falls back to the <textarea> if the browser does not support ‘contenteditable’
* Old iOS and Android 2.3- also degrade to <textarea>

There is also a (minified) 10k jQuery-plugin ‘$.wysiwyg()’ – plus (minified) 2k CSS
to create a full-featured editor which depends on:
* wysiwyg.js
* jQuery
* FontAwesome (or JPG/PNG/GIF/SVG images)
The toolbar is easy to extend – e.g. smiley, fontname and fontsize buttons below.
It is used on a website with 300M page impressions a month.

 

API:
// create wysiwyg:
var wysiwygeditor = wysiwyg({
element: document.getElmentById(‘editor-id’),
onkeypress: function( code, character, shiftKey, altKey, ctrlKey, metaKey ) {
},
onselection: function( collapsed, rect, nodes, rightclick ) {
},
onplaceholder: function( visible ) {
},
hijackcontextmenu: false
});

// properties:
wysiwygeditor.getElement();
wysiwygeditor.getHTML(); -> ‘html’
wysiwygeditor.setHTML( html );
wysiwygeditor.getSelectedHTML(); -> ‘html’|false

// selection and popup:
wysiwygeditor.collapseSelection();
wysiwygeditor.openPopup(); -> popup-handle
wysiwygeditor.closePopup();

// exec commands:
wysiwygeditor.removeFormat();
wysiwygeditor.bold();
wysiwygeditor.italic();
wysiwygeditor.underline();
wysiwygeditor.strikethrough();
wysiwygeditor.forecolor( color );
wysiwygeditor.highlight( color );
wysiwygeditor.fontName( fontname );
wysiwygeditor.fontSize( fontsize );
wysiwygeditor.subscript();
wysiwygeditor.superscript();
wysiwygeditor.align( ‘left’|’center’|’right’|’justify’ );
wysiwygeditor.format( tagname );
wysiwygeditor.indent( outdent );
wysiwygeditor.insertLink( url );
wysiwygeditor.insertImage( url );
wysiwygeditor.insertHTML( html );
wysiwygeditor.insertList( ordered );

 

 

Website: http://wysiwygjs.github.io/

 

Thanks,
SABIT SOLUTIONS

Select3 – Modular and light-weight selection library for jQuery and Zepto.js

Select3 – Modular and light-weight selection library for jQuery and Zepto.js

Benefits

  • Rich UI. Select boxes made by Select3 have rich functionality, work out of the box and are customizable.
  • Modular. Select3’s modular approach is aimed to make it easy to create custom builds with just the features that you care about and to easily swap modules for custom ones.
  • Light-weight. Select3 is smaller than comparable selection libraries, even if you’re using the “full” build with all features packed in.
  • Compatibility. Select3 can be used with both jQuery and Zepto.js and is compatible with jQuery builds without Sizzle.

 

It is difficult to customize the styling, and introducing subtle tweaks to its behavior typically meant maintaining a private fork. More specifically, I wanted to make the following changes:

  • Use custom templates, instead of the ones that are hard-coded in Select2. This would also open up the possibility of not loading the image sprite included with Select2, but instead use FontAwesome icons that I already use in my projects.
  • Use custom loading indicators, instead of the spinner GIF included by Select2.
  • I wanted to make it easier to support a use case where Select2 is used without any selection dropdown, but with the proper tokenization.
  • Make Select2 work with jQuery builds without Sizzle for better performance. Patches for this have been accepted in Select2, but unfortunately it’s a moving target causing repeated breakage. Also, once Sizzle is no longer required, it becomes much easier to support Zepto.js.
  • Personally, I preferred a more modern codebase to work with, rather than the huge monolithic library that is Select2. This also includes proper documentation of the code as well as good test coverage. At this point also support for any IE version older than 10 can be dropped.

Having said that, if you’re a user of Select2 and don’t recognize yourself in any of these issues, I advise you to keep using Select2. It’s feature-rich and actively supported, so don’t fix what ain’t broken 😉

Browser Support

  • Chrome
  • Firefox
  • Internet Explorer 10+
  • Safari 6+

Note that while Internet Explorer versions older than 10 are not supported, you might be able to get them to work, possibly with the use of some polyfills. Reports of success or patches to create a “legacy” build would be welcomed.

Dependencies

Select3 only relies on jQuery or Zepto.js being loaded on the page to work.

In addition, the default templates assume that you have included FontAwesome in your page to display the icons.

API

Call $(selector).select3(options) to initialize a Select3 instance on the element specified by the given selector. The following options are supported:

Option Type Description
allowClear Boolean Set to true to allow the selection to be cleared. This option only applies to single-value inputs.
backspaceHighlightsBeforeDelete Boolean If set to true, when the user enters a backspace while there is no text in the search field but there are selected items, the last selected item will be highlighted and when a second backspace is entered the item is deleted. If false, the item gets deleted on the first backspace. The default value is true on devices that have touch input and false on devices that don’t.
closeOnSelect Boolean Set to false to keep the dropdown open after the user has selected an item. This is useful if you want to allow the user to quickly select multiple items. The default value is true.
createTokenItem Function Function to create a new item from a user’s search term. This is used to turn the term into an item when dropdowns are disabled and the user presses Enter. It is also used by the default tokenizer to create items for individual tokens. The function receives a token parameter which is the search term (or part of a search term) to create an item for and must return an item object with id and text properties or null if no token can be created from the term. The default is a function that returns an item where the id and text both match the term for any non-empty string and which returns null otherwise. This option only applies to multiple-value inputs.
data Object or Array Initial selection data to set. This should be an object with id and text properties in the case of input type ‘Single’, or an array of such objects otherwise. This option is mutually exclusive with value.
dropdown Function Custom dropdown implementation to use for this instance
dropdownCssClass String Optional CSS class to add to the top-level dropdown element.
initSelection Function Function to map values by ID to selection data. This function receives two arguments, value and callback. The value is the current value of the selection, which is an ID or an array of IDs depending on the input type. The callback should be invoked with an object or array of objects, respectively, containing id and text properties.
inputType String or Function The input type to use. Default input types include ‘Multiple’, ‘Single’ and ‘Email’, but you can add custom input types to the Select3.InputTypes map or just specify one here as a function. The default value is ‘Single’, unless multiple is true in which case it is ‘Multiple’.
items Array Array of items from which to select. Should be an array of objects with id and text properties. As convenience, you may also pass an array of strings, in which case the same string is used for both the ID and the text. If items are given, all items are expected to be available locally and all selection operations operate on this local array only. If null, items are not available locally, and the query option should be provided to fetch remote data.
matcher Function Function to determine whether text matches a given search term. Note this function is only used if you have specified an array of items. Receives two arguments: item and term. The item is the item that should match the search term. The term is the search term, which for performance reasons has always been already processed using Select3.transformText(). The method should return the item if it matches, and null otherwise. If the item has a children array, the matcher is expected to filter those itself (be sure to only return the filtered array of children in the returned item and not to modify the children of the item argument).
placeholder String Placeholder text to display when the element has no focus and selected items.
positionDropdown Function Function to position the dropdown. Receives $dropdownEl (the element to be positioned) and $selectEl (the element of the Select3 instance) as arguments. The default implementation positions the dropdown element under the Select3’s element and gives it the same width as well.
query Function Function to use for querying items. Receives a single object as argument with the callback, offset and term properties. The callback should be invoked when the results are available. It should be passed a single object with results and more properties. The first is an array with result items and the latter is an optional boolean that may be set to true indicate more results are available through pagination. Offset is a property is only used for pagination and indicates how many results should be skipped when returning more results. The term is the search term the user is searching for. Unlike with the matcher function, the term has not been processed using Select3.transformText(). This option is ignored if the items option is used.
searchInputPlaceholder String Placeholder text to display in the search input in the dropdown.
showDropdown Boolean Set to false if you don’t want to use any dropdown (you can still open still open it programmatically using open()).
showSearchInputInDropdown Boolean Set to false to remove the search input used in dropdowns. This option only applies to single-value inputs, as multiple-value inputs don’t have the search input in the dropdown to begin with. The default is true.
suppressMouseWheelSelector String or null The Select3 Dropdown by default suppresses mousewheel events so that any scrolling in the dropdown doesn’t affect the scroll position of the page. Through this option you can select which selector should be monited for scroll events to suppress. Set it to null to disable suppressing of mousewheel events altogether. The default value is ".select3-results-container".
templates Object Object with instance-specific templates to override the global templates assigned to Select3.Templates.
tokenizer Function Function for tokenizing search terms. Will receive the input (the input string to tokenize), selection (the current selection data), createToken (callback to create a token from the search terms, should be passed an item object with id and text properties) and options (the options set on the Select3 instance) arguments. Any string returned by the tokenizer function is treated as the remainder of untokenized input. This option only applies to multiple-value inputs.
tokenSeparators Array Array of string separators which are used to separate the search term into tokens. If specified and the tokenizer property is not set, the tokenizer property will be set to a function which splits the search term into tokens separated by any of the given separators. The tokens will be converted into selectable items using the createTokenItem function. The default tokenizer also filters out already selected items. This option only applies to multiple-value inputs.
value ID or Array Initial value to set. This should be an ID (string or number) in the case of input type ‘Single’, or array of IDs otherwise. This property is mutually exclusive with data.

For documentation about all the available methods once Select3 has been instantiated, I refer to the inline documentation in the source files for now.

Events

All of these events are emitted on the element to which the Select3 instance is attached and can be listened to using jQuery’s on() method.

Event Description
"change" Emitted when the selection has been changed. Additional properties on the event object: added, removed and value.
"select3-closed" Emitted when the dropdown is closed.
"select3-highlight" Emitted when an item in the dropdown is highlighted. Additional properties on the event object: item and value.
"select3-open" Emitted when the dropdown is opened.
"select3-opening" Emitted when the dropdown is about to be opened. You can call preventDefault() on the event object to cancel the opening of the dropdown.
"select3-selected" Emitted when an item has been selected. Additional properties on the event object: id and item.
"select3-selecting" Emitted when an item is about to be selected. You can call preventDefault() on on the event object to prevent the item from being selected. Additional properties on the event object: id and item.

Migrating from Select2

Before you decide to migrate from Select2 to Select3, you should consider that not every feature supported by Select2 is supported by Select3. So check beforehand whether Select3 actually meets your requirements.

Unsupported features

The following is an (incomplete) list of features which Select3 currently lacks:

  • Reordering of selected items. Select2 allows reordering of selected items, for example through drag ‘n drop. Select3 doesn’t and there are curently no plans to implement this.
  • AJAX. Select2 has a built-in AJAX query function that makes it easier to perform AJAX requests for fetching requests. This is a convenience feature as you can achieve the same result by calling $.ajax() in the query function, but it is one Select3 currently lacks.
  • Formatting functions. Select2 allows you to specify a wide range of format*() functions in the options. With Select3, it is hoped you won’t have much need for these as Select3 allows for much easier customization of templates. However, practice will have to show if some of these are still desired.
  • Options. Select3 lacks some miscellaneous options supported by Select2. Notable omissions are selectOnBlur, maximumSelectionSize, and minimumInputLength among others.
  • Events. Select2 currently emits more events than Select3 does. Notable omissions are ‘select2-clearing’, ‘select2-focus’ and ‘select2-blur’ among others.

Notable differences

  • With Select2, you can take a <select> or <input> element in the DOM and initialize your Select2 instance based on that. Instead, to position a Select3 instance in the DOM you attach it to an empty <div> element and all options you want pass to Select3 are specified through the constructor method. An additional module is planned for Select3 that will simulate the Select2 approach, but this is not a high priority right now.
  • Select2 has explicit support for tags through the tags option. With Select3, tagging is also supported, but works through the regular items option.

Miscellaneous

  • If you have customized the CSS you use with Select2, you will have to take into account that you may need to customize it again for Select3 as the templates are very different.
  • Some properties are named differently, even though they have very similar meaning. Examples:
    • createSearchChoice is now createTokenItem.
    • The choice parameter to events is now called item.

SOURCE: https://arendjr.github.io/select3/

DEMO: https://arendjr.github.io/select3/

 

Growl Notifications jQuery plugin to show informative messages in browser

Growl Notifications jQuery plugin to show informative messages in browser

A very sleek jQuery plugin designed to provide informative messages in the browser in intuitive way.

Growl : jQuery Informative Messages Plugin

Growl : jQuery Informative Messages Plugin
Growl : jQuery Informative Messages Plugin

 

 

 

 

Installation

To install download one of these packages and include the jquery.growl.js and jquery.growl.css files in your head with the following:

<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.0.2/jquery.min.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<script src="javascript/jquery.growl.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<link href="stylesheets/jquery.growl.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" />

Example

Growling is easy:

<script type="text/javascript">
  $.growl({ title: "Growl", message: "The kitten is awake!" });
  $.growl.error({ message: "The kitten is attacking!" });
  $.growl.notice({ message: "The kitten is cute!" });
  $.growl.warning({ message: "The kitten is ugly!" });
</script>

https://github.com/ksylvest/jquery-growl

 

Download : http://ksylvest.github.io/jquery-growl/packages/jquery.growl.zip

Website DEMO: http://ksylvest.github.io/jquery-growl/

 

 

 

Bootstrap Multiselect jQuery plugin

Bootstrap Multiselect jQuery plugin

Bootstrap Multiselect is a JQuery based plugin to provide an intuitive user interface for using select inputs with the multiple attribute present. Instead of a select a bootstrap button will be shown as dropdown menu containing the single options as checkboxes

 

Bootstrap Multiselect

Bootstrap Multiselect//

  • Link the Required Files

    First, the jQuery library needs to be included. Then Twitter Bootstrap – both the Javascript library and the CSS stylesheet – needs to be included.

    1. <!– Include Twitter Bootstrap and jQuery: –>
    2. <link rel=“stylesheet” href=“css/bootstrap.min.css” type=“text/css”/>
    3. <script type=“text/javascript” src=“js/jquery.min.js”></script>
    4. <script type=“text/javascript” src=“js/bootstrap.min.js”></script>
    5.  
    6. <!– Include the plugin’s CSS and JS: –>
    7. <script type=“text/javascript” src=“js/bootstrap-multiselect.js”></script>
    8. <link rel=“stylesheet” href=“css/bootstrap-multiselect.css” type=“text/css”/>

    The jQuery library can also be included using a CDN, for example the Google CDN:

    1. <script src=“//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.0.3/jquery.min.js”></script>

    Note that the plugin will work both with version 2.x of the jQuery library as well as with version 1.10.x of the jQuery library. So for using the Google CDN you may have to adjust the version.

  • Create a Select

    Now simply use HTML to create your select input which you want to turn into a multiselect. Remember to set the multiple attribute as to get a real multiselect – but do not worry, the plugin can also be used as usual select without the multiple attribute being present.

    1. <!– Build your select: –>
    2. <select id=“example-getting-started” multiple=“multiple”>
    3. <option value=“cheese”>Cheese</option>
    4. <option value=“tomatoes”>Tomatoes</option>
    5. <option value=“mozarella”>Mozzarella</option>
    6. <option value=“mushrooms”>Mushrooms</option>
    7. <option value=“pepperoni”>Pepperoni</option>
    8. <option value=“onions”>Onions</option>
    9. </select>
  • Call the Plugin

    In the end, simply call the plugin on your select. You may also specify further options, see the Options tab for further information.

    //

      1. <!– Initialize the plugin: –>
      2. <script type=“text/javascript”>
      3. $(document).ready(function() {
      4. $(‘#example-getting-started’).multiselect();
      5. });
      6. </script>

 

Website: http://davidstutz.github.io/bootstrap-multiselect/

 

 

Thanks for reading,
SABIT SOLUTIONS

 

File Input plugin with Bootstrap / CSS styling and AJAX based actions

File Input plugin with Bootstrap / CSS styling and AJAX based actions

An enhanced HTML 5 file input for Bootstrap 3.x with file preview for various files, offers multiple selection, and more. This plugin was initially inspired by this blog article and Jasny’s File Input plugin. But the plugin has now matured with various additional features and enhancements to be a complete (yet simple) file management tool and solution for web developers.

The plugin incorporates a simple HTML markup with enhanced CSS styling of a HTML file input. But it enhances this further, by offering support to preview a wide variety of files i.e. images, text, html, video, audio, flash, and objects. In addition, it includes AJAX based uploads, dragging & dropping files, viewing upload progress, and selectively previewing, adding, or deleting files.

With release v4.0.0, the plugin now supports AJAX based uploads using HTML 5 FormData and XHR2 protocol, which is supported in most modern browsers. It also has inbuilt support for AJAX based file deletion from the server. This thereby allows powerful features to append, add, remove files on the fly. The plugin also has added DRAG & DROP support for ajax uploads. In the event, the browser does not support FormData or XHR2, the plugin degrades it to a normal form submission.

http://plugins.krajee.com/file-input/demo
//

Note

The latest version of the plugin v4.1.4 has been released. Refer the CHANGE LOG for details.

File Input Features

  • The plugin will convert a simple HTML file input to an advanced file picker control. Will help fallback to a normal HTML file input for browsers not supporting JQuery or Javascript.
  • The file input consists of the following three sections with options and templates to control the display:
    • file caption section: to display a brief information of the file(s) selected
    • file action buttons section: to browse, remove, and upload files.
    • file preview section: to display the selected files on client for preview (supports preview of image, text, flash, and video file types). Other file types will be displayed as normal thumbnails.
  • The plugin automatically converts an input with type = file to an advanced file picker input if you set its class = file. All options to the input can be passed as HTML5 data attributes.
  • Ability to select and preview multiple files. Uses HTML 5 File reader API to read and preview files. Displays the progress of files being being loaded onto the preview zone, in case many files are chosen.
  • Offers predefined templates and CSS classes which can be changed to style your file-input display as per your needs.
  1. With v1.5.0, you can now configure the plugin to show an initial preview of images/files with initial caption (more useful for record update scenarios). Refer the initialPreview and initialCaption properties in the plugin options section for configuring this.
  2. Option to show/hide any or all of the following:
    • caption section
    • preview section
    • upload button
    • remove button
  3. Customise the location of the target container elements to display the entire plugin, the caption container, the caption text, the preview container, preview image, and preview status.
  4. For text file previews, autowrap the text to the thumbnail width, and show a wrap indicator link to display complete text on hover. You can customize the wrap indicator (which defaults to …).
  5. Customise the messages for preview, progress, and files selected.
  6. Upload action defaults to form submit. Supports an upload route/server action parameter for custom ajax based upload.
  7. Triggers JQuery events for advanced development. Events currently available are filereset, fileclear, filecleared, fileloaded, and fileerror.
  8. Disabled and readonly file input support.
  9. Dynamically auto size the file captions for long file names exceeding container width.
  10. Raise new fileimageuploaded event that fires after image is completely loaded on the preview container.
  11. Autosize preview images when they exceed the size of the preview container.
  12. Completely templatized and extensible to allow configuration of the file-input the way the developer wants.
  13. Preview intelligence based on various file preview types. The inbuilt file support types are categorized as image, text, html, video, audio, flash, object, and other.
  14. allowedPreviewTypes: You can now configure which all file types are allowed to be shown as a preview. This defaults to ['image', 'html', 'text', 'video', 'audio', 'flash', 'object']. Thus all file types are treated as an object to preview by default. For exampleTo preview only image and video, you can set this to ['image', 'video'].
  15. allowedPreviewMimeTypes: In addition to allowedPreviewTypes, you can also control which all mime types can be displayed for preview. This defaults to null, meaning all mime types are supported. >NOTE: With release 2.5.0 you can now control which file types or extensions are allowed for upload by setting allowedFileTypes and allowedFileExtensions.
  16. layoutTemplates: Allows you to configure all layout template settings within one property. The layout objects that can be configured are: main1, main2, preview, caption, and modal.
  17. previewTemplates: All preview templates for each preview type have been combined into one property, instead of separate templates for image, text etc. The keys are the formats as set in allowedPreviewTypes and values are the templates used for previewing. There are default prebuilt templates for each preview file type (generic, image, text, html, video, audio, flash, object, and other). The generic template is used only for displaying initialPreview content using direct markup.
  18. previewSettings: Allows you to configure width and height for each preview image type. The plugin has default widths and heights predefined for each type i.e image, text, html, video, audio, flash, and object.
  19. fileTypeSettings: Allows you to configure and identify each preview file type using a callback. The plugin has default callbacks predefined to identify each type i.e image, text, html, video, audio, flash, and object.
  20. Replacing tags within templates has been enhanced. With this release it will automatically check for multiple occurrences of each tag to replace within a template string.

Note

Flash preview will require Shockwave flash to be installed and supported by the client browser. The flash preview currently works successfully with webkit browsers only. Video & Audio formats are however supported by all modern browsers that support the HTML5 video/audio tags. Note that browsers have limited number of video/audio formats supported by the HTML5 video element (e.g. mp4, webm, ogg, mp3, wav). The size of video files are recommended to be small (to be controlled through maxFileSize property) so that it does not affect the preview performance. You can copy a few files from the examples directory of this plugin repo, to test a few examples of flash and video files.

Thanks,
SABIT SOLUTIONS

Star Rating jQuery plugin for Bootstrap

Star Rating jQuery plugin for Bootstrap

Star Rating Screenshot
//

A simple yet powerful JQuery star rating plugin for Bootstrap which supports advanced features like fractional star fill and RTL input support. Developed with a focus on utlizing pure CSS-3 styling to render the control. The plugin uses Bootstrap markup and styling by default, but it can be overridden with any other CSS markup.

//

  1. Convert any HTML input to a star rating control.
  2. The plugin automatically converts an input to a star rating control if you set its class = rating. All options to the input can be passed as HTML5 data attributes.
  3. You can use the HTML 5 number input for polyfill and the plugin will automatically use the number attributes like min, max, and step. However, number inputs have a problem with decimal values on the Chrome Browser. Read the Browser Support section below.
  4. Involves pure CSS3 styling of the stars. Say goodbye to image sprites or playing with image backgrounds. Offers clean scalable vector icons for consistent display across devices.
  5. Specifically uses Bootstrap 3.x styles & glyphs. Can be combined to work better for Bootstrap styled projects (or input group addons).
  6. Ability to clear values and options for the stars. Control where the clear button element can be shown.
  7. Reset star rating to the initial value when the form is reset.
  8. Ability to control and display caption of the selected stars. Each rated star can have its own caption. Control where the caption element can be shown.
  9. Ability to size the rating control including the stars, caption, and clear button. Five prebuilt size templates are available xl, lg, md, sm, and xs.
  10. Support for RIGHT TO LEFT (RTL) input. Automatically changes star styling for RTL.
  11. Triggers JQuery events for advanced development. Events currently available are rating.change, rating.clear, and rating.reset.
  12. Disabled and readonly input star rating support.
  13. Change stars and caption on mouse hover (new feature since v3.0.0).
  14. Change stars and caption on slide and drag for mobile/touch devices (new feature since v3.1.0).

Browser Support

If you are using the HTML5 NUMBER input to initialize the rating, please read this. The number field does not accept decimals in Google Chrome. The input is allowed, but when the user submits the form, they get an error message and are instructed to enter a valid number (whole numbers only). Other browsers like Firefox allow decimals on the number fields. Till this is standardized across browsers, the workaround for this is to use a normal text input, and initialize the rating via javascript.

 

DEMO: http://plugins.krajee.com/star-rating/demo

SOURCE: https://github.com/kartik-v/bootstrap-star-rating

 

Thanks,
SABIT SOLUTIONS

 

 

Special thanks to http://plugins.krajee.com/