Actipro Micro Charts for WPF について

複雑なデータを表すスパークライン(セルに収めた小さなグラフ)コンポーネント

Actipro Navigation は、スタイルでアニメ化されたエキスパンダーコントロールと一緒に、 WPF アプリケーション利用のためにデザインされたNavigationBarとExplorerBarを含むコントロールスイートです。Actipro Navigation for WPFは Actipro WPF Studioの一部です。全てのActipro WPF コンポーネントライセンスは一年間のメジャー / マイナーな新しいバージョンへの無料のアップグレードを含みます。Actipro Navigation for WPFはソースコードも利用可能です。ランタイムロイヤリティフリー。

Actipro Micro Charts Features

  • Line Charts - A line chart renders quantitative data as a series of points connected by line segments. Lines can be straight, curved, or stepped. Markers can optionally be displayed based on type (such as first/last, high/low, negative, etc.).
  • Scatter Charts - Scatter charts render data points where each point is represented by a marker. Markers can use numerous built-in shapes or can be set to use custom shapes.
  • Area Charts - An area chart is a derivative of a line chart, where the area between the line and axis is filled in. As with line charts, areas can also be rendered using straight, curved, or stepped lines.
  • Stacked Area Charts - A stacked area chart combines multiple area series to represent cumulative totals. A 100% stacked area chart variant is also available, ensuring that the combined areas fill the chart, and that each area is representative of its percentage of the cumulative total.
  • Bar Charts - A bar chart displays rectangular bars with lengths proportional to the values they represent. Bar spacing can be set and the bars can be changed to render horizontally instead.
  • Stacked Bar Charts - A stacked bar chart combines multiple bar series to represent cumulative totals. A 100% stacked bar chart variant is also available, ensuring that the combined bars fill the chart, and that each area is representative of its percentage of the cumulative total.
  • Win/Loss Charts - A win/loss chart is a bar chart with an 'absolute view' where any positive value renders as a full-height upward bar, any negative value renders as a full-height downward bar, and zero values render as a line in the middle.
  • Combined - A micro chart can contain multiple series, even series of differing types. For instance a line series can be plotted on top of a bar series. The combination of multiple kinds of series can help make data visualization even more attractive.
  • Box Plots - A box plot visualizes key statistical measures for a data set, such as the median, mean and quartile values.
  • Bullet Graphs - A bullet graph is a special kind of bar chart used to display a single value in a context of one or more related values.
  • Candlestick Charts - Candlestick charts are designed to visualize a change in value over an interval of time, and as such are excellent at showing price movements in stocks, currency values, or securities such as bonds.
  • Heat Maps - A heat map is a type of chart that displays a data value matrix represented through markers of varying colors and/or sizes. The gradient used to determine the color to render for any given value is fully customizable.
  • Segment Charts - A segment chart provides a visual representation of an integer value in relation to a total number. Each segment in the chart is rendered as highlighted or unhighlighted. This sort of chart is great for use on dashboards, and also as an indicator of steps or progress achieved.
  • Trend Indicators - The trend indicator is a three state control that is intended to reflect whether a numeric value is higher, the same as, or lower than an origin value. This is very useful to indicate stock price changes for example.
  • Multiple Series - Multiple series can be shown on a single chart. XY charts can share the same axes, or use different scales entirely. The visibility of each series can easily be toggled on and off. Pie charts can show multiple pie series as concentric rings.
  • Easy Data Binding - Bind to any IEnumerable as your data source. Simple charts can bind directly to date or numeric value collections. More complex objects or other data can be bound using property paths.
  • Data Aggregation - Data aggregation limits the number of data points rendered on-screen, for both increased performance and easier viewing. Several aggregation modes are available, and fine tune how many points are shown in relation to the size of the chart.
  • Hot Tracking - Hot tracking displays a customizable tooltip which contains the values of the data point closest to the end-user's mouse cursor.
  • Baseline - The customizable baseline value determines what the chart considers 'positive' and 'negative' values, and can be optionally displayed.
  • Markers - Markers (first, last, high, low, negative, etc.) are small bullets that mark the location of data points in a chart.
  • Ranges - Specific value ranges of the chart can be highlighted horizontally or vertically to convey additional information to the end-user.
  • Palettes - There are several built-in color palettes for series display, ready for use. Or provide your own, allowing you to style charts however you like.
  • Series Visibility - The visibility of any series can be set so that it is either displayed or hidden from view.