class ZAxis extends Object
- Annotations
- @RawJSType() @ScalaJSDefined()
- Note
JavaScript name:
zAxis
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- new ZAxis()
Value Members
-
final
def
!=(arg0: Any): Boolean
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef → Any
-
final
def
##(): Int
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef → Any
-
final
def
==(arg0: Any): Boolean
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef → Any
-
val
allowDecimals: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether to allow decimals in this axis' ticks.
Whether to allow decimals in this axis' ticks. When counting integers, like persons or hits on a web page, decimals should be avoided in the labels.
True by default (unwanted for this type of data), false
- Since
2.0
Example: -
val
alternateGridColor: UndefOr[|[String, Object]]
When using an alternate grid color, a band is painted across the plot area between every other grid line.
When using an alternate grid color, a band is painted across the plot area between every other grid line.
Example: -
final
def
asInstanceOf[T0]: T0
- Definition Classes
- Any
-
val
categories: UndefOr[Array[String]]
If categories are present for the xAxis, names are used instead of numbers for that axis.
If categories are present for the xAxis, names are used instead of numbers for that axis. Since Highcharts 3.0, categories can also be extracted by giving each point a name and setting axis type to
category
. However, if you have multiple series, best practice remains defining thecategories
array.Example:
categories: ['Apples', 'Bananas', 'Oranges']
Defaults tonull
-
val
ceiling: UndefOr[Double]
The highest allowed value for automatically computed axis extremes.
The highest allowed value for automatically computed axis extremes.
- Since
4.0
Example: -
val
className: UndefOr[String]
A class name that opens for styling the axis by CSS, especially in Highcharts styled mode.
A class name that opens for styling the axis by CSS, especially in Highcharts styled mode. The class name is applied to group elements for the grid, axis elements and labels.
- Since
5.0.0
Example: -
def
clone(): AnyRef
- Attributes
- protected[java.lang]
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
- Annotations
- @throws( ... )
-
val
crosshair: UndefOr[|[Boolean, CleanJsObject[ZAxisCrosshair]]]
Configure a crosshair that follows either the mouse pointer or the hovered point.
Configure a crosshair that follows either the mouse pointer or the hovered point.
In styled mode, the crosshairs are styled in the
.highcharts-crosshair
,.highcharts-crosshair-thin
or.highcharts-xaxis-category
classes.- Since
4.1
Example: -
val
dateTimeLabelFormats: UndefOr[Object]
For a datetime axis, the scale will automatically adjust to the appropriate unit.
For a datetime axis, the scale will automatically adjust to the appropriate unit. This member gives the default string representations used for each unit. For intermediate values, different units may be used, for example the
day
unit can be used on midnight andhour
unit be used for intermediate values on the same axis. For an overview of the replacement codes, see dateFormat.Defaults to:
{ millisecond: '%H:%M:%S.%L', second: '%H:%M:%S', minute: '%H:%M', hour: '%H:%M', day: '%e. %b', week: '%e. %b', month: '%b \'%y', year: '%Y' }
Example: -
val
description: UndefOr[String]
Requires Accessibility module
Requires Accessibility module
Description of the axis to screen reader users.
- Since
5.0.0
Example: -
val
endOnTick: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether to force the axis to end on a tick.
Whether to force the axis to end on a tick. Use this option with the
maxPadding
option to control the axis end.True by default and false for Y axis
- Since
1.2.0
Example: -
final
def
eq(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
-
def
equals(arg0: Any): Boolean
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef → Any
-
val
events: UndefOr[CleanJsObject[ZAxisEvents]]
Event handlers for the axis.
-
def
finalize(): Unit
- Attributes
- protected[java.lang]
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
- Annotations
- @throws( classOf[java.lang.Throwable] )
-
val
floor: UndefOr[Double]
The lowest allowed value for automatically computed axis extremes.
The lowest allowed value for automatically computed axis extremes.
- Since
4.0
Example: -
final
def
getClass(): Class[_]
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef → Any
-
val
gridLineColor: UndefOr[|[String, Object]]
Color of the grid lines extending the ticks across the plot area.
Color of the grid lines extending the ticks across the plot area.
In styled mode, the stroke is given in the
.highcharts-grid-line
class.Example: -
val
gridLineDashStyle: UndefOr[String]
The dash or dot style of the grid lines.
The dash or dot style of the grid lines. For possible values, see this demonstration.
- Since
1.2
Example: -
val
gridLineWidth: UndefOr[Double]
The width of the grid lines extending the ticks across the plot area.
The width of the grid lines extending the ticks across the plot area.
In styled mode, the stroke width is given in the
.highcharts-grid-line
class.Example: -
val
gridZIndex: UndefOr[Double]
The Z index of the grid lines.
The Z index of the grid lines.
-
def
hasOwnProperty(v: String): Boolean
- Definition Classes
- Object
-
def
hashCode(): Int
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef → Any
-
val
id: UndefOr[String]
An id for the axis.
An id for the axis. This can be used after render time to get a pointer to the axis object through
chart.get()
.- Since
1.2.0
Example: -
final
def
isInstanceOf[T0]: Boolean
- Definition Classes
- Any
-
def
isPrototypeOf(v: Object): Boolean
- Definition Classes
- Object
-
val
labels: UndefOr[CleanJsObject[ZAxisLabels]]
The axis labels show the number or category for each tick.
-
val
lineColor: UndefOr[|[String, Object]]
The color of the line marking the axis itself.
The color of the line marking the axis itself.
In styled mode, the line stroke is given in the
.highcharts-axis-line
or.highcharts-xaxis-line
class.Example: -
val
lineWidth: UndefOr[Double]
The width of the line marking the axis itself.
The width of the line marking the axis itself.
In styled mode, the stroke width is given in the
.highcharts-axis-line
or.highcharts-xaxis-line
class.Example: -
val
linkedTo: UndefOr[Double]
Index of another axis that this axis is linked to.
Index of another axis that this axis is linked to. When an axis is linked to a master axis, it will take the same extremes as the master, but as assigned by min or max or by setExtremes. It can be used to show additional info, or to ease reading the chart by duplicating the scales.
- Since
2.0.2
-
val
max: UndefOr[Double]
The maximum value of the axis.
The maximum value of the axis. If
null
, the max value is automatically calculated. If theendOnTick
option is true, themax
value might be rounded up.If a tickAmount is set, the axis may be extended beyond the set max in order to reach the given number of ticks. The same may happen in a chart with multiple axes, determined by chart.alignTicks, where a
tickAmount
is applied internally. -
val
maxPadding: UndefOr[Double]
Padding of the max value relative to the length of the axis.
Padding of the max value relative to the length of the axis. A padding of 0.05 will make a 100px axis 5px longer. This is useful when you don't want the highest data value to appear on the edge of the plot area. When the axis'
max
option is set or a max extreme is set usingaxis.setExtremes()
, the maxPadding will be ignored.- Since
1.2.0
Example: -
val
maxZoom: UndefOr[Double]
Deprecated.
Deprecated. Renamed to
minRange
as of Highcharts 2.2. -
val
min: UndefOr[Double]
The minimum value of the axis.
The minimum value of the axis. If
null
the min value is automatically calculated. If thestartOnTick
option is true, themin
value might be rounded down.Example: -
val
minPadding: UndefOr[Double]
Padding of the min value relative to the length of the axis.
Padding of the min value relative to the length of the axis. A padding of 0.05 will make a 100px axis 5px longer. This is useful when you don't want the lowest data value to appear on the edge of the plot area. When the axis'
min
option is set or a min extreme is set usingaxis.setExtremes()
, the minPadding will be ignored.- Since
1.2.0
Example: -
val
minRange: UndefOr[Double]
The minimum range to display on this axis.
The minimum range to display on this axis. The entire axis will not be allowed to span over a smaller interval than this. For example, for a datetime axis the main unit is milliseconds. If minRange is set to 3600000, you can't zoom in more than to one hour.
The default minRange for the x axis is five times the smallest interval between any of the data points.
On a logarithmic axis, the unit for the minimum range is the power. So a minRange of 1 means that the axis can be zoomed to 10-100, 100-1000, 1000-10000 etc.
Note that the
minPadding
,maxPadding
,startOnTick
andendOnTick
settings also affect how the extremes of the axis are computed.Example: -
val
minTickInterval: UndefOr[Double]
The minimum tick interval allowed in axis values.
The minimum tick interval allowed in axis values. For example on zooming in on an axis with daily data, this can be used to prevent the axis from showing hours. Defaults to the closest distance between two points on the axis.
- Since
2.3.0
-
val
minorGridLineColor: UndefOr[|[String, Object]]
Color of the minor, secondary grid lines.
Color of the minor, secondary grid lines.
In styled mode, the stroke width is given in the
.highcharts-minor-grid-line
class.Example: -
val
minorGridLineDashStyle: UndefOr[String]
The dash or dot style of the minor grid lines.
The dash or dot style of the minor grid lines. For possible values, see this demonstration.
- Since
1.2
Example: -
val
minorGridLineWidth: UndefOr[Double]
Width of the minor, secondary grid lines.
Width of the minor, secondary grid lines.
In styled mode, the stroke width is given in the
.highcharts-grid-line
class.Example: -
val
minorTickColor: UndefOr[|[String, Object]]
Color for the minor tick marks.
Color for the minor tick marks.
Example: -
val
minorTickInterval: UndefOr[|[String, Double]]
Tick interval in scale units for the minor ticks.
Tick interval in scale units for the minor ticks. On a linear axis, if
"auto"
, the minor tick interval is calculated as a fifth of the tickInterval. Ifnull
, minor ticks are not shown.On logarithmic axes, the unit is the power of the value. For example, setting the minorTickInterval to 1 puts one tick on each of 0.1, 1, 10, 100 etc. Setting the minorTickInterval to 0.1 produces 9 ticks between 1 and 10, 10 and 100 etc. A minorTickInterval of "auto" on a log axis results in a best guess, attempting to enter approximately 5 minor ticks between each major tick.
If user settings dictate minor ticks to become too dense, they don't make sense, and will be ignored to prevent performance problems. On axes using categories, minor ticks are not supported.
Null by default, "auto" on linear Y axis, 5 units on linear Y axis, "auto" on logarithmic Y axis, 0.1 on logarithmic Y axis.
Example: -
val
minorTickLength: UndefOr[Double]
The pixel length of the minor tick marks.
The pixel length of the minor tick marks.
Example: -
val
minorTickPosition: UndefOr[String]
The position of the minor tick marks relative to the axis line.
The position of the minor tick marks relative to the axis line. Can be one of
inside
andoutside
.Example: -
val
minorTickWidth: UndefOr[Double]
The pixel width of the minor tick mark.
The pixel width of the minor tick mark.
Example: -
val
nameToX: UndefOr[Boolean]
Applies only when the axis
type
iscategory
.Applies only when the axis
type
iscategory
. WhennameToX
is true, points are placed on the X axis according to their names. If the same point name is repeated in the same or another series, the point is placed on the same X position as other points of the same name. WhennameToX
is false, the points are laid out in increasing X positions regardless of their names, and the X axis category will take the name of the last point in each position.- Since
4.2.7
Example: -
final
def
ne(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
-
final
def
notify(): Unit
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
-
final
def
notifyAll(): Unit
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
-
val
offset: UndefOr[Double]
The distance in pixels from the plot area to the axis line.
The distance in pixels from the plot area to the axis line. A positive offset moves the axis with it's line, labels and ticks away from the plot area. This is typically used when two or more axes are displayed on the same side of the plot. With multiple axes the offset is dynamically adjusted to avoid collision, this can be overridden by setting offset explicitly.
-
val
opposite: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether to display the axis on the opposite side of the normal.
Whether to display the axis on the opposite side of the normal. The normal is on the left side for vertical axes and bottom for horizontal, so the opposite sides will be right and top respectively. This is typically used with dual or multiple axes.
Example: -
val
plotBands: UndefOr[Array[CleanJsObject[ZAxisPlotBands]]]
An array of colored bands stretching across the plot area marking an interval on the axis.
An array of colored bands stretching across the plot area marking an interval on the axis.
In a gauge, a plot band on the Y axis (value axis) will stretch along the perimeter of the gauge.
In styled mode, the plot bands are styled by the
.highcharts-plot-band
class in addition to theclassName
option. -
val
plotLines: UndefOr[Array[CleanJsObject[ZAxisPlotLines]]]
An array of lines stretching across the plot area, marking a specific value on one of the axes.
An array of lines stretching across the plot area, marking a specific value on one of the axes.
In styled mode, the plot lines are styled by the
.highcharts-plot-line
class in addition to theclassName
option. -
def
propertyIsEnumerable(v: String): Boolean
- Definition Classes
- Object
-
val
reversed: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether to reverse the axis so that the highest number is closest to the origin.
Whether to reverse the axis so that the highest number is closest to the origin. If the chart is inverted, the x axis is reversed by default.
Example: -
val
showEmpty: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether to show the axis line and title when the axis has no data.
Whether to show the axis line and title when the axis has no data.
-
val
showFirstLabel: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether to show the first tick label.
Whether to show the first tick label.
Example: -
val
showLastLabel: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether to show the last tick label.
Whether to show the last tick label.
Example: -
val
softMax: UndefOr[Double]
A soft maximum for the axis.
A soft maximum for the axis. If the series data maximum is greater than this, the axis will stay at this maximum, but if the series data maximum is higher, the axis will flex to show all data.
- Since
5.0.1
Example: -
val
softMin: UndefOr[Double]
A soft minimum for the axis.
A soft minimum for the axis. If the series data minimum is greater than this, the axis will stay at this minimum, but if the series data minimum is lower, the axis will flex to show all data.
- Since
5.0.1
Example: -
val
startOfWeek: UndefOr[Double]
For datetime axes, this decides where to put the tick between weeks.
For datetime axes, this decides where to put the tick between weeks. 0 = Sunday, 1 = Monday.
Example: -
val
startOnTick: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether to force the axis to start on a tick.
Whether to force the axis to start on a tick. Use this option with the
minPadding
option to control the axis start.False by default, true on X axis
- Since
1.2.0
Example: -
final
def
synchronized[T0](arg0: ⇒ T0): T0
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
-
val
tickAmount: UndefOr[Double]
The amount of ticks to draw on the axis.
The amount of ticks to draw on the axis. This opens up for aligning the ticks of multiple charts or panes within a chart. This option overrides the
tickPixelInterval
option.This option only has an effect on linear axes. Datetime, logarithmic or category axes are not affected.
- Since
4.1.0
Example: -
val
tickColor: UndefOr[|[String, Object]]
Color for the main tick marks.
Color for the main tick marks.
In styled mode, the stroke is given in the
.highcharts-tick
class.Example: -
val
tickInterval: UndefOr[Double]
The interval of the tick marks in axis units.
The interval of the tick marks in axis units. When
null
, the tick interval is computed to approximately follow the tickPixelInterval on linear and datetime axes. On categorized axes, anull
tickInterval will default to 1, one category. Note that datetime axes are based on milliseconds, so for example an interval of one day is expressed as24 * 3600 * 1000
.On logarithmic axes, the tickInterval is based on powers, so a tickInterval of 1 means one tick on each of 0.1, 1, 10, 100 etc. A tickInterval of 2 means a tick of 0.1, 10, 1000 etc. A tickInterval of 0.2 puts a tick on 0.1, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 0.8, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 20, 40 etc.
If the tickInterval is too dense for labels to be drawn, Highcharts may remove ticks.
If the chart has multiple axes, the alignTicks option may interfere with the
tickInterval
setting.Example: -
val
tickLength: UndefOr[Double]
The pixel length of the main tick marks.
The pixel length of the main tick marks.
Example: -
val
tickPixelInterval: UndefOr[Double]
If tickInterval is
null
this option sets the approximate pixel interval of the tick marks.If tickInterval is
null
this option sets the approximate pixel interval of the tick marks. Not applicable to categorized axis.The tick interval is also influenced by the minTickInterval option, that, by default prevents ticks from being denser than the data points.
Defaults to
72
for the Y axis and100
for the X axis.Example: -
val
tickPosition: UndefOr[String]
The position of the major tick marks relative to the axis line.
The position of the major tick marks relative to the axis line. Can be one of
inside
andoutside
."outside" by default, "inside" on X axis
Example: -
val
tickPositioner: UndefOr[Function]
A callback function returning array defining where the ticks are laid out on the axis.
A callback function returning array defining where the ticks are laid out on the axis. This overrides the default behaviour of tickPixelInterval and tickInterval. The automatic tick positions are accessible through
this.tickPositions
and can be modified by the callback. -
val
tickPositions: UndefOr[Array[Double]]
An array defining where the ticks are laid out on the axis.
An array defining where the ticks are laid out on the axis. This overrides the default behaviour of tickPixelInterval and tickInterval.
-
val
tickWidth: UndefOr[Double]
The pixel width of the major tick marks.
The pixel width of the major tick marks.
In styled mode, the stroke width is given in the
.highcharts-tick
class.Example: -
val
tickmarkPlacement: UndefOr[String]
For categorized axes only.
For categorized axes only. If
on
the tick mark is placed in the center of the category, ifbetween
the tick mark is placed between categories. The default isbetween
if thetickInterval
is 1, elseon
.Example: -
val
title: UndefOr[CleanJsObject[ZAxisTitle]]
The axis title, showing next to the axis line.
-
def
toLocaleString(): String
- Definition Classes
- Object
-
def
toString(): String
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef → Any
-
val
type: UndefOr[String]
The type of axis.
The type of axis. Can be one of
linear
,logarithmic
,datetime
orcategory
. In a datetime axis, the numbers are given in milliseconds, and tick marks are placed on appropriate values like full hours or days. In a category axis, the point names of the chart's series are used for categories, if not a categories array is defined. -
val
units: UndefOr[Array[Any]]
Datetime axis only.
Datetime axis only. An array determining what time intervals the ticks are allowed to fall on. Each array item is an array where the first value is the time unit and the second value another array of allowed multiples. Defaults to:
units: [[ 'millisecond', // unit name [1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 25, 50, 100, 200, 500] // allowed multiples ], [ 'second', [1, 2, 5, 10, 15, 30] ], [ 'minute', [1, 2, 5, 10, 15, 30] ], [ 'hour', [1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 12] ], [ 'day', [1] ], [ 'week', [1] ], [ 'month', [1, 3, 6] ], [ 'year', null ]]
-
def
valueOf(): Any
- Definition Classes
- Object
-
val
visible: UndefOr[Boolean]
Whether axis, including axis title, line, ticks and labels, should be visible.
Whether axis, including axis title, line, ticks and labels, should be visible.
- Since
4.1.9
Example: -
final
def
wait(): Unit
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
- Annotations
- @throws( ... )
-
final
def
wait(arg0: Long, arg1: Int): Unit
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
- Annotations
- @throws( ... )
-
final
def
wait(arg0: Long): Unit
- Definition Classes
- AnyRef
- Annotations
- @throws( ... )