Lavacharts is a graphing / chart library for PHP5.4+ that wraps the Google Chart API.
Please don't be discouraged if you see that it has been "years" since an update, but rather think that Lavacharts has settled into a "stable" state and requires less tinkering from me. I would love to add new features, but my responsibilities leave little room for my projects. I am happy to field issues, answer questions, debug and help if needed. Lavacharts is not vaporware! π
- Updated! Laravel 5.5+ auto-discovery
- Any option for customizing charts that Google supports, Lavacharts should as well. Just use the chart constructor to assign any customization options you wish!
- Visit Google's Chart Gallery for details on available options
- Custom JavaScript module for interacting with charts client-side
- AJAX data reloading
- Fetching charts
- Events integration
- Column Formatters & Roles
- Blade template extensions for Laravel
- Twig template extensions for Symfony
- Carbon support for date/datetime/timeofday columns
- Now supporting 22 Charts!
- Annotation, Area, Bar, Bubble, Calendar, Candlestick, Column, Combo, Gantt, Gauge, Geo, Histogram, Line, Org, Pie, Sankey, Scatter, SteppedArea, Table, Timeline, TreeMap, and WordTree!
For complete documentation, please visit lavacharts.com
Upgrade guide: Migrating from 2.5.x to 3.0.x
For contributing, a handy guide can be found here
In your project's main composer.json
file, add this line to the requirements:
"khill/lavacharts": "^3.1"
Run Composer to install Lavacharts:
$ composer update
If you are using Lavacharts with Silex, Lumen or your own Composer project, that's no problem! Just make sure to:
require 'vendor/autoload.php';
within you project and create an instance of Lavacharts: $lava = new Khill\Lavacharts\Lavacharts;
To integrate Lavacharts into Laravel, a ServiceProvider has been included.
Thanks to the fantastic new Package Auto-Discovery feature added in 5.5, you're ready to go, no registration required π
To modify the default configuration of Lavacharts, datetime formats for datatables or adding your maps api key...
Publish the configuration with php artisan vendor:publish --tag=lavacharts
Register Lavacharts in your app by adding these lines to the respective arrays found in config/app.php
:
<?php
// config/app.php
// ...
'providers' => [
// ...
Khill\Lavacharts\Laravel\LavachartsServiceProvider::class,
],
// ...
'aliases' => [
// ...
'Lava' => Khill\Lavacharts\Laravel\LavachartsFacade::class,
]
To modify the default configuration of Lavacharts, datetime formats for datatables or adding your maps api key...
Publish the configuration with php artisan vendor:publish --tag=lavacharts
Register Lavacharts in your app by adding these lines to the respective arrays found in app/config/app.php
:
<?php
// app/config/app.php
// ...
'providers' => array(
// ...
"Khill\Lavacharts\Laravel\LavachartsServiceProvider",
),
// ...
'aliases' => array(
// ...
'Lava' => "Khill\Lavacharts\Laravel\LavachartsFacade",
)
To modify the default configuration of Lavacharts, datetime formats for datatables or adding your maps api key...
Publish the configuration with php artisan config:publish khill/lavacharts
The package also includes a Bundle for Symfony to enable Lavacharts as a service that can be pulled from the Container.
Add the bundle to the registerBundles method in the AppKernel, found at app/AppKernel.php
:
<?php
// app/AppKernel.php
class AppKernel extends Kernel
{
// ..
public function registerBundles()
{
$bundles = array(
// ...
new Khill\Lavacharts\Symfony\Bundle\LavachartsBundle(),
);
}
}
Add the service definition to the app/config/config.yml
file
imports:
# ...
- { resource: "@LavachartsBundle/Resources/config/services.yml"
The creation of charts is separated into two parts: First, within a route or controller, you define the chart, the data table, and the customization of the output.
Second, within a view, you use one line and the library will output all the necessary JavaScript code for you.
Here is an example of the simplest chart you can create: A line chart with one dataset and a title, no configuration.
Setting up your first chart.
$data = $lava->DataTable();
$data->addDateColumn('Day of Month')
->addNumberColumn('Projected')
->addNumberColumn('Official');
// Random Data For Example
for ($a = 1; $a < 30; $a++) {
$rowData = [
"2017-4-$a", rand(800,1000), rand(800,1000)
];
$data->addRow($rowData);
}
Arrays work for datatables as well...
$data->addColumns([
['date', 'Day of Month'],
['number', 'Projected'],
['number', 'Official']
]);
Or you can use \Khill\Lavacharts\DataTables\DataFactory
to create DataTables in another way
Customize your chart, with any options found in Google's documentation. Break objects down into arrays and pass to the chart.
$lava->LineChart('Stocks', $data, [
'title' => 'Stock Market Trends',
'animation' => [
'startup' => true,
'easing' => 'inAndOut'
],
'colors' => ['blue', '#F4C1D8']
]);
The chart will needs to be output into a div on the page, so an html ID for a div is needed.
Here is where you want your chart <div id="stocks-div"></div>
- If no options for the chart are set, then the third parameter is the id of the output:
$lava->LineChart('Stocks', $data, 'stocks-div');
- If there are options set for the chart, then the id may be included in the options:
$lava->LineChart('Stocks', $data, [
'elementId' => 'stocks-div'
'title' => 'Stock Market Trends'
]);
- The 4th parameter will also work:
$lava->LineChart('Stocks', $data, [
'title' => 'Stock Market Trends'
], 'stocks-div');
Pass the main Lavacharts instance to the view, because all of the defined charts are stored within, and render!
<?= $lava->render('LineChart', 'Stocks', 'stocks-div'); ?>
Or if you have multiple charts, you can condense theh view code withL
<?= $lava->renderAll(); ?>
The complete changelog can be found here