# Line A line chart is a way of plotting data points on a line. Often, it is used to show trend data, or the comparison of two data sets. {% chartjs %} { "type": "line", "data": { "labels": [ "January", "February", "March", "April", "May", "June", "July" ], "datasets": [{ "label": "My First Dataset", "data": [65, 59, 80, 81, 56, 55, 40], "fill": false, "borderColor": "rgb(75, 192, 192)", "lineTension": 0.1 }] }, "options": { } } {% endchartjs %} ## Example Usage ```javascript var myLineChart = new Chart(ctx, { type: 'line', data: data, options: options }); ``` ## Dataset Properties The line chart allows a number of properties to be specified for each dataset. These are used to set display properties for a specific dataset. For example, the colour of a line is generally set this way. | Name | Type | [Scriptable](../general/options.md#scriptable-options) | [Indexable](../general/options.md#indexable-options) | Default | ---- | ---- | :----: | :----: | ---- | [`backgroundColor`](#line-styling) | [`Color`](../general/colors.md) | Yes | - | `'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1)'` | [`borderCapStyle`](#line-styling) | `string` | Yes | - | `'butt'` | [`borderColor`](#line-styling) | [`Color`](../general/colors.md) | Yes | - | `'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1)'` | [`borderDash`](#line-styling) | `number[]` | Yes | - | `[]` | [`borderDashOffset`](#line-styling) | `number` | Yes | - | `0.0` | [`borderJoinStyle`](#line-styling) | `string` | Yes | - | `'miter'` | [`borderWidth`](#line-styling) | `number` | Yes | - | `3` | [`cubicInterpolationMode`](#cubicinterpolationmode) | `string` | Yes | - | `'default'` | [`clip`](#line-styling) | number|object | - | - | `borderWidth / 2` | [`fill`](#line-styling) | boolean|string | Yes | - | `true` | [`hoverBackgroundColor`](#line-styling) | [`Color`](../general/colors.md) | Yes | - | `undefined` | [`hoverBorderCapStyle`](#line-styling) | `string` | Yes | - | `undefined` | [`hoverBorderColor`](#line-styling) | [`Color`](../general/colors.md) | Yes | - | `undefined` | [`hoverBorderDash`](#line-styling) | `number[]` | Yes | - | `undefined` | [`hoverBorderDashOffset`](#line-styling) | `number` | Yes | - | `undefined` | [`hoverBorderJoinStyle`](#line-styling) | `string` | Yes | - | `undefined` | [`hoverBorderWidth`](#line-styling) | `number` | Yes | - | `undefined` | [`label`](#general) | `string` | - | - | `''` | [`lineTension`](#line-styling) | `number` | - | - | `0.4` | [`order`](#general) | `number` | - | - | `0` | [`pointBackgroundColor`](#point-styling) | `Color` | Yes | Yes | `'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1)'` | [`pointBorderColor`](#point-styling) | `Color` | Yes | Yes | `'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1)'` | [`pointBorderWidth`](#point-styling) | `number` | Yes | Yes | `1` | [`pointHitRadius`](#point-styling) | `number` | Yes | Yes | `1` | [`pointHoverBackgroundColor`](#interactions) | `Color` | Yes | Yes | `undefined` | [`pointHoverBorderColor`](#interactions) | `Color` | Yes | Yes | `undefined` | [`pointHoverBorderWidth`](#interactions) | `number` | Yes | Yes | `1` | [`pointHoverRadius`](#interactions) | `number` | Yes | Yes | `4` | [`pointRadius`](#point-styling) | `number` | Yes | Yes | `3` | [`pointRotation`](#point-styling) | `number` | Yes | Yes | `0` | [`pointStyle`](#point-styling) | string|Image | Yes | Yes | `'circle'` | [`showLine`](#line-styling) | `boolean` | - | - | `undefined` | [`spanGaps`](#line-styling) | `boolean` | - | - | `undefined` | [`steppedLine`](#stepped-line) | boolean|string | - | - | `false` | [`xAxisID`](#general) | `string` | - | - | first x axis | [`yAxisID`](#general) | `string` | - | - | first y axis ### General | Name | Description | ---- | ---- | `label` | The label for the dataset which appears in the legend and tooltips. | `order` | The drawing order of dataset. Also affects order for stacking, tooltip, and legend. | `xAxisID` | The ID of the x axis to plot this dataset on. | `yAxisID` | The ID of the y axis to plot this dataset on. ### Point Styling The style of each point can be controlled with the following properties: | Name | Description | ---- | ---- | `pointBackgroundColor` | The fill color for points. | `pointBorderColor` | The border color for points. | `pointBorderWidth` | The width of the point border in pixels. | `pointHitRadius` | The pixel size of the non-displayed point that reacts to mouse events. | `pointRadius` | The radius of the point shape. If set to 0, the point is not rendered. | `pointRotation` | The rotation of the point in degrees. | `pointStyle` | Style of the point. [more...](../configuration/elements.md#point-styles) All these values, if `undefined`, fallback first to the dataset options then to the associated [`elements.point.*`](../configuration/elements.md#point-configuration) options. ### Line Styling The style of the line can be controlled with the following properties: | Name | Description | ---- | ---- | `backgroundColor` | The line fill color. | `borderCapStyle` | Cap style of the line. See [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CanvasRenderingContext2D/lineCap). | `borderColor` | The line color. | `borderDash` | Length and spacing of dashes. See [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CanvasRenderingContext2D/setLineDash). | `borderDashOffset` | Offset for line dashes. See [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CanvasRenderingContext2D/lineDashOffset). | `borderJoinStyle` | Line joint style. See [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/CanvasRenderingContext2D/lineJoin). | `borderWidth` | The line width (in pixels). | `clip` | How to clip relative to chartArea. Positive value allows overflow, negative value clips that many pixels inside chartArea. `0` = clip at chartArea. Clipping can also be configured per side: `clip: {left: 5, top: false, right: -2, bottom: 0}` | `fill` | How to fill the area under the line. See [area charts](area.md). | `lineTension` | Bezier curve tension of the line. Set to 0 to draw straightlines. This option is ignored if monotone cubic interpolation is used. | `showLine` | If false, the line is not drawn for this dataset. | `spanGaps` | If true, lines will be drawn between points with no or null data. If false, points with `NaN` data will create a break in the line. If the value is `undefined`, `showLine` and `spanGaps` fallback to the associated [chart configuration options](#configuration-options). The rest of the values fallback to the associated [`elements.line.*`](../configuration/elements.md#line-configuration) options. ### Interactions The interaction with each point can be controlled with the following properties: | Name | Description | ---- | ----------- | `pointHoverBackgroundColor` | Point background color when hovered. | `pointHoverBorderColor` | Point border color when hovered. | `pointHoverBorderWidth` | Border width of point when hovered. | `pointHoverRadius` | The radius of the point when hovered. ### cubicInterpolationMode The following interpolation modes are supported. * `'default'` * `'monotone'` The `'default'` algorithm uses a custom weighted cubic interpolation, which produces pleasant curves for all types of datasets. The `'monotone'` algorithm is more suited to `y = f(x)` datasets : it preserves monotonicity (or piecewise monotonicity) of the dataset being interpolated, and ensures local extremums (if any) stay at input data points. If left untouched (`undefined`), the global `options.elements.line.cubicInterpolationMode` property is used. ### Stepped Line The following values are supported for `steppedLine`. * `false`: No Step Interpolation (default) * `true`: Step-before Interpolation (eq. `'before'`) * `'before'`: Step-before Interpolation * `'after'`: Step-after Interpolation * `'middle'`: Step-middle Interpolation If the `steppedLine` value is set to anything other than false, `lineTension` will be ignored. ## Configuration Options The line chart defines the following configuration options. These options are merged with the global chart configuration options, `Chart.defaults.global`, to form the options passed to the chart. | Name | Type | Default | Description | ---- | ---- | ------- | ----------- | `showLines` | `boolean` | `true` | If false, the lines between points are not drawn. | `spanGaps` | `boolean` | `false` | If false, NaN data causes a break in the line. ## Default Options It is common to want to apply a configuration setting to all created line charts. The global line chart settings are stored in `Chart.defaults.line`. Changing the global options only affects charts created after the change. Existing charts are not changed. For example, to configure all line charts with `spanGaps = true` you would do: ```javascript Chart.defaults.line.spanGaps = true; ``` ## Data Structure The `data` property of a dataset for a line chart can be passed in two formats. ### number[] ```javascript data: [20, 10] ``` When the `data` array is an array of numbers, the x axis is generally a [category](../axes/cartesian/category.md#category-cartesian-axis). The points are placed onto the axis using their position in the array. When a line chart is created with a category axis, the `labels` property of the data object must be specified. ### Point[] ```javascript data: [{ x: 10, y: 20 }, { x: 15, y: 10 }] ``` This alternate is used for sparse datasets, such as those in [scatter charts](./scatter.md#scatter-chart). Each data point is specified using an object containing `x` and `y` properties. ## Stacked Area Chart Line charts can be configured into stacked area charts by changing the settings on the y axis to enable stacking. Stacked area charts can be used to show how one data trend is made up of a number of smaller pieces. ```javascript var stackedLine = new Chart(ctx, { type: 'line', data: data, options: { scales: { yAxes: [{ stacked: true }] } } }); ```