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239 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
239 lines
8.6 KiB
Plaintext
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Title: Options Tutorial
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This document will help you understand how jqPlot's options
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relate to the API documentation and the jqPlot object
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itself. For a listing of options available to jqPlot,
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see <jqPlot Options> in the jqPlotOptions.txt file.
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The key to effectively using jqPlot is understanding jqPlot's
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options. The online documentation is API documentation. While
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it explains what attributes and methods various objects posses,
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it doesn't explain how to use or set those attributes through
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options. This tutorial will help explain that.
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Lets assume you are creating a plot
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like this:
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> chart = $.jqplot('chart', dataSeries, optionsObj);
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First, note that you shouldn't try to directly set attributes on the
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"chart" object (like chart.grid.shadow) after your call to $.jqplot().
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At best this won't do anything **(see below). You should pass options in via
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the "optionsObj".
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the optionsObj really represents the plot object (jqPlot object, not
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to be confused with the $.jqplot function which will create a jqPlot
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object). Attributes you specify on that object will be merged with
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attributes in the jqPlot object. The axes, legend, series, etc. are
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attributes on the jqPlot object. The jqPlot/optionsObj object looks
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something like (only some attributes shown):
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> jqPlot-|
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> |-seriesColors
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> |-textColor
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> |-fontFamily
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> |-fontSize
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> |-stackSeries
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> |-series(Array)-|
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> | |-Series1-|
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> | | |-lineWidth
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> | | |-shadow
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> | | |-showLine
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> | | |-showMarker
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> | | |-color
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> | |-Series2...
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> | |-...
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> | |-SeriesN
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> |
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> |-grid(Object)-|
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> | |-drawGridLines
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> | |-background
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> | |-borderColor
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> | |-borderWidth
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> | |-shadow
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> |
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> |-title(Object)-|
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> | |-text
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> | |-show
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> | |-fontFamily
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> | |-fontSize
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> | |-textAlign
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> | |-textColor
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> |
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> |-axes(Object)-|
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> | |-xais-|
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> | | |-min
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> | | |-max
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> | | |-numberTicks
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> | | |-showTicks
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> | | |-showTickMarks
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> | | |-pad
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> |
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> | ... and so on
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The optionsObj should follow the same construction as if it were a
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jqPlot object (with some exceptions/shortcuts I'll mention in a
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moment). So generally, when you see something like
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"this.drawGridLines" in the grid properties in the docs, just replace
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"this" with "grid" in your options object. So it becomes
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optionsObj.grid.drawGridLines. Do likewise with the other objects in
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the plot, replacing "this", with the respective attribute on the plot
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like "legend" or "title". Series and Axes are handled a little
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different, because series is an array and axes has 4 distinct children
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"xaxis", "yaxis", "x2axis" and "y2axis".
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So, to remove the shadow from the grid and change the grid border size
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you would do:
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> optionObj = {grid:{shadow:false, borderWidth:9.0}};
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To do the same as above but also make all the text in the plot red you
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would do:
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> optionObj = {
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> textColor:"#ff0000",
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> grid:{shadow:false, borderWidth:9.0}
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> }
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Here is a more deeply nested example. Say you want to specify a min
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and max on your y axis and use a specific color for your second
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series. That would look like:
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> optionsObj = {
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> axes:{yaxis:{min:5, max:230}},
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> series:[{},{color:"#33ff66"}]
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> }
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Note that series options are an array in order of the series data you
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sent in to your plot. To get to the second series, you have to put an
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object (even if empty) in place of the first series.
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There is a handy shortcut to assign options to all axes or all series
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at one go. Use axesDefaults and seriesDefaults. So, if you wanted
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both x and y axes to start at 0 and you wanted all series to not show
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markers, you could do:
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> optionsObj = {axesDefaults:{min:0}, seriesDefaults:{showMarker:false}}
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Another shortcut is for the plot title. Normally, you would assign
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options to the title as an object. If you specify a title option as a
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string, it will assign that to the title.text property automatically.
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So these two are equivalent:
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> optionsObj = {title:{text:"My Plot"}}
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and
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> optionsObj = {title:"My Plot"}
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Where things need more explaination is with renderers, plugins and
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their options. Briefly, what's renderer, what's a plugin.
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A renderer is an object that is used to draw something and gets
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attached to an existing object in the plot in order to draw it. A
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plugin does more than just provide drawing functionality to an
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object. It will do more like calculate a trend line, change the
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cursor, provide event driven functionality, etc. I consider renderers
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plugins, but plugins don't have to be renderers.
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So, how do you use renderers, plugins, and specify their options?
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Some common renderes are for bar charts and category axes. If you
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want to render your series as a bar chart with each set of bars
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showing up in a category on the x axis, you do:
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> optionsObj = {
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> seriesDefaults:{renderer:$.jqplot.BarRenderer},
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> axes:{xaxis:{renderer:$.jqplot.CategoryAxisRenderer}}
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> }
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This replaces the default renderer used for all series in the plot
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with a bar renderer and the x axis default renderer (but not any other
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axis) with a category renderer.
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Now, how would I assign options to those renderers? The renderer's
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attributes may not be present in the pre-existing jqPlot object, they
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may be specific to the renderer. This is done through the
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"rendererOptions" option on the appropriate object. So, if I wanted my
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bars to be 25 pixels wide, I would do:
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> optionsObj = {
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> seriesDefaults:{
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> renderer:$.jqplot.BarRenderer},
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> rendererOptions:{
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> barWidth:25
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> },
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> axes:{xaxis:{renderer:$.jqplot.CategoryAxisRenderer}}
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> }
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Again, this is using the "seriesDefaults" option, which will apply
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options to all series in the plot. You could do the same on any
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particular series in the plot through the "series" options array.
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Plugins are free to add their own options. For example, the
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highlighter plugin has it's own set of options that are unique to it.
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As a result, it responds to options placed in the "highlighter"
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attribute of your options object. So, if I wanted to change the
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highlighter tooltip to fade in and out slowly and be positioned
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directly above the point I'm highlighting:
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> optionsObj = {
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> highlighter:{tooltipFadeSpeed:'slow', tooltipLocation:'n'}
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> }
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Other plugins, like dragable and trendlines, add their options in with
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the series. This is because both of those plugins can have different
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options for different series in the plot. So, if you wanted to specify the
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color of the dragable and constrain it to drag only on the x axis as well
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as specify the color of the trend line you could do:
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> series:[{
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> dragable: {
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> color: '#ff3366',
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> constrainTo: 'x'
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> },
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> trendline: {
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> color: '#cccccc'
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> }
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> }]
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This would apply those options to the first series only. If you had 2 series
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and wanted to turn off dragging and trend lines on the second series, you could do:
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> series:[{
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> dragable: {
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> color: '#ff3366',
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> constrainTo: 'x'
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> },
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> trendline: {
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> color: '#cccccc'
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> }
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> }, {
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> isDragable: false,
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> trendline:{
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> show: false
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> }
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> }]
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Note, series dragability is turned off with the "isDragable" option directly on
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the series itself, not with a suboption of "dragable". This may be improved
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in the future.
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I hope this is helpful.
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A few key points to remember:
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- When you see "this" in the api docs, you generally replace it with
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the name of the object (in lowercase) you are looking at in your
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options object.
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- seriesDefaults and axesDefaults are convenient shortcuts.
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- to assign options to a renderer, generally use the "rendererOptions"
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- plugins may add their own options attribute, like "highlighter" or
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"cursor".
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** Note: you can set attributes after the plot is created (like
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plot.grid.shadow = false), but you'll have to issue the appropriate
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calls to possibly reinitialize and redraw the plot. jqPlot can
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definitely handle this to change the plot after creation (this is how
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the dragable plugin updates the plot data and the trend line plugin
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recomputes itself when data changes). This hasn't been documented
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yet, however.
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