Awesome
quickchart-python
A Python client for the quickchart.io image charts web service.
Installation
Use the quickchart
library in this project, or install through pip:
pip install quickchart.io
As of release 2.0, this package requires >= Python 3.7. If you need support for earlier versions of Python, use version 1.0.1.
Usage
This library provides a QuickChart
class. Import and instantiate it. Then set properties on it and specify a Chart.js config:
from quickchart import QuickChart
qc = QuickChart()
qc.width = 500
qc.height = 300
qc.config = {
"type": "bar",
"data": {
"labels": ["Hello world", "Test"],
"datasets": [{
"label": "Foo",
"data": [1, 2]
}]
}
}
Use get_url()
on your quickchart object to get the encoded URL that renders your chart:
print(qc.get_url())
# https://quickchart.io/chart?c=%7B%22chart%22%3A+%7B%22type%22%3A+%22bar%22%2C+%22data%22%3A+%7B%22labels%22%3A+%5B%22Hello+world%22%2C+%22Test%22%5D%2C+%22datasets%22%3A+%5B%7B%22label%22%3A+%22Foo%22%2C+%22data%22%3A+%5B1%2C+2%5D%7D%5D%7D%7D%7D&w=600&h=300&bkg=%23ffffff&devicePixelRatio=2.0&f=png
If you have a long or complicated chart, use get_short_url()
to get a fixed-length URL using the quickchart.io web service (note that these URLs only persist for a short time unless you have a subscription):
print(qc.get_short_url())
# https://quickchart.io/chart/render/f-a1d3e804-dfea-442c-88b0-9801b9808401
The URLs will render an image of a chart:
<img src="https://quickchart.io/chart?c=%7B%22type%22%3A+%22bar%22%2C+%22data%22%3A+%7B%22labels%22%3A+%5B%22Hello+world%22%2C+%22Test%22%5D%2C+%22datasets%22%3A+%5B%7B%22label%22%3A+%22Foo%22%2C+%22data%22%3A+%5B1%2C+2%5D%7D%5D%7D%7D&w=600&h=300&bkg=%23ffffff&devicePixelRatio=2.0&f=png" width="500" />Using Javascript functions in your chart
Chart.js sometimes relies on Javascript functions (e.g. for formatting tick labels). There are a couple approaches:
- Build chart configuration as a string instead of a Python object. See
examples/simple_example_with_function.py
. - Build chart configuration as a Python object and include a placeholder string for the Javascript function. Then, find and replace it.
- Use the provided
QuickChartFunction
class. Seeexamples/using_quickchartfunction.py
for a full example.
A short example using QuickChartFunction
:
qc = QuickChart()
qc.config = {
"type": "bar",
"data": {
"labels": ["A", "B"],
"datasets": [{
"label": "Foo",
"data": [1, 2]
}]
},
"options": {
"scales": {
"yAxes": [{
"ticks": {
"callback": QuickChartFunction('(val) => val + "k"')
}
}],
"xAxes": [{
"ticks": {
"callback": QuickChartFunction('''function(val) {
return val + '???';
}''')
}
}]
}
}
}
print(qc.get_url())
Customizing your chart
You can set the following properties:
config: dict or str
The actual Chart.js chart configuration.
If your chart configuration is JSON-compatible, it's usually easiest to pass an object (example). If your chart configuration contains a Javascript function, you may pass it as a string (example) or use QuickChartFunction
(example).
width: int
Width of the chart image in pixels. Defaults to 500
height: int
Height of the chart image in pixels. Defaults to 300
format: str
Format of the chart. Defaults to png. svg is also valid.
background_color: str
The background color of the chart. Any valid HTML color works. Defaults to #ffffff (white). Also takes rgb, rgba, and hsl values.
device_pixel_ratio: float
The device pixel ratio of the chart. This will multiply the number of pixels by the value. This is usually used for retina displays. Defaults to 1.0.
version: str
The version of Chart.js to use. Acceptable values are documented here. Usually used to select Chart.js 3+.
scheme: str
The protocol to use. Defaults to https
.
host: str
Override the host of the chart render server. Defaults to quickchart.io.
key: str
Set an API key that will be included with the request.
Getting URLs
There are two ways to get a URL for your chart object.
get_url(): str
Returns a URL that will display the chart image when loaded.
get_short_url(): str
Uses the quickchart.io web service to create a fixed-length chart URL that displays the chart image. Returns a URL such as https://quickchart.io/chart/render/f-a1d3e804-dfea-442c-88b0-9801b9808401
.
Note that short URLs expire after a few days for users of the free service. You can subscribe to keep them around longer.
Other functionality
get_bytes()
Returns the bytes representing the chart image.
to_file(path: str)
Writes the chart image to a file path.
More examples
Checkout the examples
directory to see other usage.