Charts - Bars
Bar charts express quantities through a bar's length, using a common baseline.
Basics
Bar charts series should contain a data
property containing an array of values.
You can customize bar ticks with the xAxis
.
This axis might have scaleType='band'
and its data
should have the same length as your series.
Using a dataset
If your data is stored in an array of objects, you can use the dataset
helper prop.
It accepts an array of objects such as dataset={[{x: 1, y: 32}, {x: 2, y: 41}, ...]}
.
You can reuse this data when defining the series and axis, thanks to the dataKey
property.
For example xAxis={[{ dataKey: 'x'}]}
or series={[{ dataKey: 'y'}]}
.
Bar size
You can define bar dimensions with categoryGapRatio
and barGapRatio
properties.
The categoryGapRatio
defines the gap between two categories.
The ratio is obtained by dividing the size of the gap by the size of the category (the space used by bars).
The barGapRatio
defines the gap between two bars of the same category.
It's the size of the gap divided by the size of the bar.
So a value of 1
will result in a gap between bars equal to the bar width.
And a value of -1
will make bars overlap on top of each over.
import { BarChart } from '@mui/x-charts/BarChart';
<BarChart
// ...
xAxis={[
{
scaleType: 'band'
data: ['Page 1', 'Page 2', 'Page 3']
categoryGapRatio: undefined
barGapRatio: undefined
}
/>
Playground
Stacking
Each bar series can get a stack
property expecting a string value.
Series with the same stack
will be stacked on top of each other.
Stacking strategy
You can use the stackOffset
and stackOrder
properties to define how the series will be stacked.
By default, they are stacked in the order you defined them, with positive values stacked above 0 and negative values stacked below 0.
For more information, see stacking docs.
Layout
Bar direction
Bar charts can be rendered with a horizontal layout by providing the layout="horizontal"
prop.
If you're using composition, you should set the property layout: 'horizontal'
to each bar series object.
Tick placement
When using a "band"
scale, the axis has some additional customization properties about the tick position.
tickPlacement
for the position of tickstickLabelPlacement
for the position of the label associated with the tick
You can test all configuration options in the following demo:
Grid
You can add a grid in the background of the chart with the grid
prop.
See Axis—Grid documentation for more information.
Color scale
As with other charts, you can modify the series color either directly, or with the color palette.
You can also modify the color by using axes colorMap
which maps values to colors.
The bar charts use by priority:
- The value axis color
- The band axis color
- The series color
Learn more about the colorMap
properties in the Styling docs.
<ScatterChart
/* ... */
xAxis={[{
colorMap: {
type: 'piecewise',
thresholds: [new Date(2021, 1, 1), new Date(2023, 1, 1)],
colors: ['blue', 'red', 'blue'],
}
}]}
yAxis={[{}]}
/>
Border Radius
To give your bar chart rounded corners, you can change the value of the borderRadius
property on the BarChart.
It will work with any positive value and will be properly applied to horizontal layouts, stacks and negative values.
Border Radius
<BarChart
/* ... */
borderRadius={10}
/>
Labels
You can display labels on the bars.
To do so, the BarChart
or BarPlot
accepts a barLabel
property.
It can either get a function that gets the bar item and some context.
Or you can pass 'value'
to display the raw value of the bar.
Custom Labels
You can display, change or hide labels based on conditional logic.
To do so, provide a function to the barLabel
.
Labels are not displayed if the function returns null
.
In the example we display a 'High'
text on values higher than 10, and hide values when the generated bar height is lower than 60px.
Click event
Bar charts provides two click handlers:
onItemClick
for click on a specific bar.onAxisClick
for a click anywhere in the chart
They both provide the following signature.
const clickHandler = (
event, // The mouse event.
params, // An object that identifies the clicked elements.
) => {};
Click on the chart
// Data from item click
// The data will appear here
// Data from axis click
// The data will appear here
Composition
If you're using composition, you can get those click event as follow.
Notice that the onAxisClick
will handle both bar and line series if you mix them.
import ChartsOnAxisClickHandler from '@mui/x-charts/ChartsOnAxisClickHandler';
// ...
<ChartContainer>
{/* ... */}
<ChartsOnAxisClickHandler onAxisClick={onAxisClick} />
<BarPlot onItemClick={onItemClick} />
</ChartContainer>;
Animation
To skip animation at the creation and update of your chart, you can use the skipAnimation
prop.
When set to true
it skips animation powered by @react-spring/web
.
Charts containers already use the useReducedMotion
from @react-spring/web
to skip animation according to user preferences.
// For a single component chart
<BarChart skipAnimation />
// For a composed chart
<ResponsiveChartContainer>
<BarPlot skipAnimation />
</ResponsiveChartContainer>
Number of items
Number of series
API
See the documentation below for a complete reference to all of the props and classes available to the components mentioned here.