Polymer element for the plotly.js library.
<plotly-plot>
provides a thin, fully-functional interface to the core of the
library. The key properties of the plot, data
, layout
, and config
, are
all exposed as Polymer properties; updates to these properties via .set
will
automatically trigger redrawing.
All of the update methods provided with plotly.js have been exposed:
redraw
, restyle
, and relayout
. The other methods are also
available for dynamic updates: addTraces
, deleteTraces
, and moveTraces
.
Finally, the custom plotly-specific events are also replicated as Polymer events.
For thorough documentation, visit the project homepage.
Install the element with Bower by adding it to your project's dependencies in
bower.json
, or install via NPM/Yarn by adding it to your package.json
. If
you install over NPM, make sure your dependencies are flat, as Polymer HTML
imports require it.
Import the element into your project by using an HTML import:
<link rel="import" href="../plotly-plot/plotly-plot.html">
There are two common ways to use <plotly-plot>
to extend your own elements.
The best way to customize plotly-plot functionality for your own specific
components is to embed <plotly-plot>
elements inside them. From there, your
components can dicate their own APIs, which won't need to be as generic as the
complete Plotly API provided by plotly-plot
. For example, if you want to have
an element that makes a pie chart, it might look like this:
<dom-module id="my-pie-chart">
<template>
<plotly-plot id="pp"></plotly-plot>
</template>
<script>
Polymer({
is: 'my-pie-chart',
properties: {
values: Array,
labels: Array,
title: String,
},
observers: [
'draw(values.*,labels.*,title)'
],
draw: function () {
var data = [{ values: this.values, labels: this.labels, type: 'pie' }];
var layout = { title: this.title };
this.$.pp.update(data, layout);
},
});
</script>
</dom-module>
However, If you want to write your own generic element that behaves like
plotly-plot
, exposing the same generic API but changing defaults or adding
additional customization features, you can use the PlotlyPlotBehavior
exposed in plotly-plot-behavior.html
. Just make sure your local DOM contains
an element that will contain the plot itself. By default, the behavior expects
this tag to have the id #plot
, but you can change that criterion by overriding
the getPlot()
method. It might look something like this:
<dom-module id="my-plotly-plot">
<template>
<div id="plot" data=[[data]], config="[[config]]" layout="[[layout]]">
</div>
</template>
<script>
Polymer({
is: 'my-plotly-plot',
behaviors: [PlotlyPlot.PlotlyPlotBehavior],
// override and add methods here
});
</script>
</dom-module>
Polymer elements, and web components in general, depend on being able to "hide" their inner DOM from the rest of the page. This is accomplished through a set of functionality known as the "shadow DOM."
Polymer has two kinds of shadow DOM implementations: native shadow DOM, and a shim called "shady DOM." Native shadow DOM is newer and yields improved performance, but it has incomplete support in browsers outside the newest Chrome and can often cause problems with existing code. For this reason, shady DOM is still the default implementation in Polymer 1.x.
Unfortunately, native shadow DOM is currently incompatible with plotly.js. The icon toolbar layout code in the plotly.js library fails for all plotly plots rendered inside a shadow DOM, whether by Polymer or any other means. The element cannot tell that the library code has misrendered. It acts as if it rendered correctly and responds to JavaScript normally.
This is a library-level issue between plotly.js and the DOM. It does not have
to do with this element itself, and <plotly-plot>
can't do anything about it
until either plotly.js or the shadow DOM code change to accommodate one another.
In the mean time, if you're using <plotly-plot>
, make sure you
do not have Polymer.dom = 'shadow'
in the global Polymer settings of your
project.
Element dependencies are managed via Bower for the front-end/Polymer components, and NPM for everything else.
Installing NPM dependencies:
$ npm install
Installing / updating Bower dependencies:
$ npm run bower:install
$ npm run bower:update
Polylint can be used to lint the HTML/JS to account for common Polymer gotchas
$ npm run polylint
Polylint documentation.
ESLint is used to lint the JavaScript.
$ npm run eslint
Both linters can be run together:
$ npm run lint
Polyserve makes it easy to use the element along with its Bower dependencies without having to move or copy files. It works well as a development server. Running Polyserve:
$ npm start
Once running, http://localhost:8080/components/plotly-plot/
shows the index
page of the element.
Navigate to http://localhost:8080/components/plotly-plot/test/
(as served
by Polyserve) to run the tests.
The tests are implemented with web-component-tester (WCT). WCT comes with a script that lets you run the tests in a terminal using Selenium:
$ npm test
npm test -- -l chrome
will only run tests in chrome.npm test -- -p
will keep the browsers alive after test runs (refresh to re-run).npm test -- test/some-file.html
will test only the files you specify.wct.conf.json
configures plugins and options for WCT- Running WCT inside a Docker container is tricky:
- Chrome must be run with
--no-sandbox
, or the container must have elevated privileges - Browsers must connect to a headless X server (Xvfb) to run.
- WCT does not really give you control over command line args to chrome, and
does not transfer all environmenet variables, so you have to write a
wrapper script that calls
xvfb-run chrome --no-sandbox "$@" ...
. You can get WCT to use that script by setting theLAUNCHPAD_CHROME
environment variable to point to it.
- Chrome must be run with
On every merge request in this repo, linting and tests will automatically be
performed by Travis CI.
Tagged versions in the master
branch are automatically released to NPM and
Bower, and automatically update the documentation on the element homepage.