ChartView made in SwiftUI
Swift package for displaying charts effortlessly.
V2 focuses on providing a strong and easy to use base, on which you can build your beautiful custom charts. It provides basic building blocks, like a chart view (bar, pie, line and ring chart), grid view, card view, interactive label for displaying the curent chart value.
So you decide, whether you build a fully fledged interactive view, or just display a bare bone chart
It supports:
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It requires iOS 13 and Xcode 11!
In Xcode go to File -> Swift Packages -> Add Package Dependency
and paste in the repoβs url: https://github.com/AppPear/ChartView
import the package in the file you would like to use it: import SwiftUICharts
You can display a Chart by adding a chart view to your parent view:
Added an example project, with iOS, watchOS target: https://github.com/AppPear/ChartViewDemo
LineChartView with multiple lines!
First release of this feature, interaction is disabled for now, Iβll figure it out how could be the best to interact with multiple lines with a single touch.
Usage:
MultiLineChartView(data: [([8,32,11,23,40,28], GradientColors.green), ([90,99,78,111,70,60,77], GradientColors.purple), ([34,56,72,38,43,100,50], GradientColors.orngPink)], title: "Title")
Gradient colors are now under the GradientColor
struct you can create your own gradient by GradientColor(start: Color, end: Color)
Available preset gradients:
Full screen view called LineView!!!
LineView(data: [8,23,54,32,12,37,7,23,43], title: "Line chart", legend: "Full screen") // legend is optional, use optional .padding()
Adopts to dark mode automatically
You can add your custom darkmode style by specifying:
let myCustomStyle = ChartStyle(...)
let myCutsomDarkModeStyle = ChartStyle(...)
myCustomStyle.darkModeStyle = myCutsomDarkModeStyle
Line chart is interactive, so you can drag across to reveal the data points
You can add a line chart with the following code:
LineChartView(data: [8,23,54,32,12,37,7,23,43], title: "Title", legend: "Legendary") // legend is optional
Turn drop shadow off by adding to the Initialiser: dropShadow: false
[New feature] you can display labels also along values and points for each bar to descirbe your data better!
Bar chart is interactive, so you can drag across to reveal the data points
You can add a bar chart with the following code:
Labels and points:
BarChartView(data: ChartData(values: [("2018 Q4",63150), ("2019 Q1",50900), ("2019 Q2",77550), ("2019 Q3",79600), ("2019 Q4",92550)]), title: "Sales", legend: "Quarterly") // legend is optional
Only points:
BarChartView(data: ChartData(points: [8,23,54,32,12,37,7,23,43]), title: "Title", legend: "Legendary") // legend is optional
ChartData structure
Stores values in data pairs (actually tuple): (String,Double)
You can initialise ChartData multiple ways:
ChartData(points: [8,23,54,32,12,37,7,23,43])
ChartData(points: [2.34,3.14,4.56])
ChartData(values: [("2018 Q4",63150), ("2019 Q1",50900)])
You can add different formats:
ChartForm.small
ChartForm.medium
ChartForm.large
BarChartView(data: ChartData(points: [8,23,54,32,12,37,7,23,43]), title: "Title", form: ChartForm.small)
For floating point numbers, you can set a custom specifier:
BarChartView(data: ChartData(points:[1.23,2.43,3.37]) ,title: "A", valueSpecifier: "%.2f")
For integers you can disable by passing: valueSpecifier: "%.0f"
You can set your custom image in the upper right corner by passing in the initialiser: cornerImage:Image(systemName: "waveform.path.ecg")
Turn drop shadow off by adding to the Initialiser: dropShadow: false
Customizable:
let chartStyle = ChartStyle(backgroundColor: Color.black, accentColor: Colors.OrangeStart, secondGradientColor: Colors.OrangeEnd, chartFormSize: ChartForm.medium, textColor: Color.white, legendTextColor: Color.white )
...
BarChartView(data: [8,23,54,32,12,37,7,23,43], title: "Title", style: chartStyle)
You can access built-in styles:
BarChartView(data: [8,23,54,32,12,37,7,23,43], title: "Title", style: Styles.barChartMidnightGreen)
ChartForm
.small
.medium
.large
.detail
BarChartView(data: [8,23,54,32,12,37,7,23,43], title: "Title", form: ChartForm.small)
If you want to animate back movement after completing your gesture, you set animatedToBack
as true
.
You can add a pie chart with the following code:
PieChartView(data: [8,23,54,32], title: "Title", legend: "Legendary") // legend is optional
Turn drop shadow off by adding to the Initialiser: dropShadow: false