VictoryHistogram
VictoryHistogram renders a dataset as series of bars representing "bins", allowing the ability to view distribution of the data. The data passed in will be "binned" according to the bin prop that is provided (if any), allowing for flexibility in how these bins are determined. VictoryHistogram can be composed with VictoryChart to create histogram charts.
VictoryHistogram is intended to be used with quantitative data. Please use VictoryBar for qualitative or categorical data.
animate
type: boolean || object
VictoryHistogram uses the standard animate prop. Read about it here
See the Animations Guide for more detail on animations and transitions
animate={{
duration: 2000,
onLoad: { duration: 1000 }
}}bins
type: number || array[numbers] || array[dates]
default: undefined
VictoryHistogram uses d3.bin to do binning.
The bins prop is used to specify how the data will be binned. There are a few options for this, the first being passing no value, ie the default behavior, which is letting d3.bin generate the buckets based on the data. The second is passing a number, which specifies approximately the number of bins to generate, this is not a guarantee (see d3.bin for more details). The last options are passing an array of numbers or dates (depending on the data), this array represents an array of thresholds. So for example if the bin prop provided is [0, 10, 20, 35], this would result in 3 bins, that would look like [0, 10) , [10, 20), [20, 35].
This prop allows for a lot of flexibility in how the data is displayed. For example it is possible to have uneven sized bins if so desired. It is also possible to group the data by days, weeks, or years.
binSpacing
type: number
The binSpacing prop is used to specify space between each bin. binSpacing represents the number of pixels that will be between each bin (including at the beginning and end of the bins). By default, bins are rendered with no spacing.
containerComponent
type: element
VictoryHistogram uses the standard containerComponent prop. Read about it here
containerComponent={<VictoryVoronoiContainer/>}cornerRadius
type: function || number || { top, bottom, topLeft, topRight, bottomLeft, bottomRight }
The cornerRadius prop specifies a radius to apply to each bar. If this prop is given as a single number, the radius will only be applied to the top of each bar. When this prop is given as a function, it will be evaluated for each bar with the props object corresponding to that bar.
data
type: array[object]
VictoryHistogram uses the standard data prop, except for it only expects each object within the array to have x properties. The x data accessor prop can be used to define a custom data format. Read about it here
Because each bar represents a bin rather than a particular data point (like with VictoryScatter for example), when accessing datum via a prop that passes datum such as style, datum will have properties x, x0, x1, y, and binnedData. x is the midpoint between the bin, x0 is the beginning of the bin, x1 is the end of the bin, y is the aggregate amount of data points within that bin, and binnedData is an array of the original data points that were grouped into this bin.
VictoryHistogram is intended to be used with quantitative data. Please use VictoryBar for qualitative or categorical data.
See the Data Accessors Guide for more detail on formatting and processing data.
dataComponent
type: element
VictoryHistogram uses the standard dataComponent prop. Read about it here
VictoryHistogram supplies the following props to its dataComponent: barWidth, cornerRadius, data, datum, horizontal, index, padding, origin, scale, style, width, height, x, y, y0, x0.
See the Custom Components Guide for more detail on creating your own dataComponents
default: <Bar />
dataComponent={<Bar events={{ onClick: handleClick }}/>}domain
type: array[low, high] || { x: [low, high], y: [low, high] }
VictoryHistogram uses the standard domain prop. Read about it here
domain={{x: [0, 100], y: [0, 1]}}domainPadding
type: number || array[left, right] || { x: [left, right], y: [bottom, top] }
VictoryHistogram uses the standard domainPadding prop. Read about it here
domainPadding={{x: [10, -10], y: 5}}eventKey
type: string || integer || array[string] || function
VictoryHistogram uses the standard eventKey prop to specify how event targets are addressed. This prop is not commonly used. Read about the eventKey prop in more detail here
eventKey = "x";events
type: array[object]
VictoryHistogram uses the standard events prop. Read about it here
See the Events Guide for more information on defining events.
externalEventMutations
type: array[object]
VictoryHistogram uses the standard externalEventMutations prop. Read about it in detail
groupComponent
type: element
VictoryHistogram uses the standard groupComponent prop. Read about it here
default: <g/>
groupComponent={<g transform="translate(10, 10)" />}height
type: number
VictoryHistogram uses the standard height prop. Read about it here
default (provided by default theme): height={300}
height={400}horizontal
type: boolean
The horizontal prop determines whether the bins will be laid vertically or horizontally. The bins will be vertical if this prop is false or unspecified, or horizontal if the prop is set to true.
default: horizontal={false}
labelComponent
type: element
VictoryHistogram uses the standard labelComponent prop. Read about it here
default: <VictoryLabel/>
labels
type: array || function
VictoryHistogram uses the standard labels prop. Read about it here
maxDomain
type: number || { x: number, y: number }
VictoryHistogram uses the standard maxDomain prop. Read about it in detail
minDomain
type: number || { x: number, y: number }
VictoryHistogram uses the standard minDomain prop. Read about it in detail
name
type: string
The name prop is used to reference a component instance when defining shared events.
name = "series-1";padding
type: number || { top: number, bottom: number, left: number, right: number }
VictoryHistogram uses the standard padding prop. Read about it here
default (provided by default theme): padding={50}
padding={{ top: 20, bottom: 60 }}polar
type: boolean
note: Polar Charts are not yet supported for VictoryHistogram
range
type: array[low, high] || { x: [low, high], y: [low, high] }
The range prop is usually controlled by VictoryChart. It will not typically be necessary to set a range prop manually
Read about the range prop in detail
scale
type: scale || { x: scale, y: scale }
VictoryHistogram uses the standard scale prop. Read about it here
Options for scale include "linear", "time", "log", "sqrt" and the d3-scale functions that correspond to these options.
default: scale="linear"
scale={{x: "linear", y: "log"}}sharedEvents
The sharedEvents prop is used internally to coordinate events between components. It should not be set manually.
singleQuadrantDomainPadding
type: boolean || { x: boolean, y: boolean }
VictoryHistogram uses the standard singleQuadrantDomainPadding prop. Read about it here
sortKey
type: string || integer || array[string] || function
VictoryHistogram uses the standard sortKey prop. Read about it here
See the Data Accessors Guide for more detail on formatting and processing data.
sortKey = "x";sortOrder
type: "ascending" || "descending"
The sortOrder prop specifies whether sorted data should be returned in ascending or descending order.
default: sortOrder="ascending"
standalone
type: boolean
VictoryHistogram uses the standard standalone prop. Read about it here
note: When VictoryHistogram is nested within a component like VictoryChart, this prop will be set to false
default: standalone={true}
style
type: { parent: object, data: object, labels: object }
VictoryHistogram uses the standard style prop. Read about it here
default (provided by default theme): See grayscale theme for more detail
theme
type: object
VictoryHistogram uses the standard theme prop. Read about it here
See the Themes Guide for information about creating custom themes.
default: theme={VictoryTheme.grayscale}
theme={VictoryTheme.material}width
type: number
VictoryHistogram uses the standard width prop. Read about it here
default (provided by default theme): width={450}
width={400}x
type: string || integer || array[string] || function
VictoryHistogram uses the standard x data accessor prop. Read about it here
See the Data Accessors Guide for more detail on formatting and processing data.
x = "employee.name";