In the vitara bar chart click on ‘Edit’ button to open the properties window.
In the properties window open the ‘Series’ menu. Click on ‘Edit’ for the series on which you want to show the data markers.
Expnad the ‘Type’ drop down box, and select the option ‘Data Markers’. When we select the option ‘Data Markers’, the series window will display all the options related to data markers.
In the below screenshot the basic properties of the data markers like marker selection, marker color and marker size are highlighted.
Click on the marker icon to open the marker selection window. Please refer to the below screenshot.
After selecting the desired marker close the marker selection window. Select the size of the marker and color.
Below is the screenshot of bar chart in which the bars are replaced with marker.
When we enable data markers, we will see one marker for each data point. The position of the data marker is determined by the data point’s value. If we disable the Keep aspect ratio attribute, the data marker will be stretched to fill the space between the axis origin, i.e. 0, and the data point value.
Below is the screenshot of how the data markers looks when we disable Keep Aspect ratio property.
In normal mode, one data marker is displayed for each data point. The data markers will be generated from a bar/column shape filled with markers when the Repeat Marker attribute is used. The marker will be filled with a certain number of rows inside each bar.
Enable the check box Repeat Marker.
Select number of units per row. Click on apply.
If we choose fill mode, the data markers will be filled with a color depending on the value we set as Maximum value (while the marker size remains the same for all data points).
We could use the choices in the series tab to construct the scatter chart. We deleted the “Scatter” option from the “Series” menu. We may now use the “Data Markers” option to create scatter plots. The series-type drop down box will appear like this .
Below are the steps to implement the scatter chart using the Vitara charts .
Step 1: Use a Vitara Bar/column chart.
Step 2: In the “Appearance” tab, enable the option “Overlay Bar/Column”.
Step 3: Open the “Series” tab and for the metric which you want to show as a simple tick, click on ‘Edit’.
Step 4: Select the series type as “Data Markers”.
Step 5: When we select the option ‘Data Markers’, the series window will display all the options related to data markers.
Step 6: Click on “Apply” button.
A new feature has been added to the vitara charts, allowing users to customise the data markers. This implies that the user can upload a local svg file to the server and use it as a data marker in Vitara charts. Custom svg markers can be used in the attributes of the following vitara charts:
Series tab,
Markers tab, and
Thresholds tab.
This feature is supported in the below charts.
Area, Bar Bullet, Column, Dumbbell, Line, Simple KPI, Slope, Sparkline, Tornado, Trellis, and Waffle.
Custom SVG markers can be used in the thresholds . The user can then submit the .svg file to the server and use it as a data marker in the Vitara Grid display.
Lets see how to use custom markers in the below steps. For better understanding of the process, we will consider the custom svg file as ‘car.svg’ in this example
Step 1:
Upload an svg file [car.svg in this case] into the server .
Step 2:
Create any chart [line chart for example] that supports custom svg markers. Go to the marker tab, enable marker and click the ‘marker type’ icon, then the marker selection window will be opened. See the screenshot below.
Step 3:
Go to the Custom tab. Enter the name of the file in the SVG path textbox [e.g, car.svg(name is case sensitive)] and click on ‘Apply’ and close the marked selection window. See the screenshot below
Then the custom svg marker[car] gets applied on the chart. see screenshot below
In this way, the custom markers can be applied from the Series tab and Thresholds tab as well.
Custom svg markers are supported in data labels generated by thresholds, and various svg markers can be used to make the data labels more presentable to the applicable threshold.
The example below shows how to use ‘sun.svg’ as a custom marker on the threshold with data labels enabled.