Custom events allow you to easily interact with and extend RGraph for your own purposes. The list of available events is below, as is an example of how to make use of them with the RGraph.AddCustomEventListener() function. Event handler functions (ie your functions) are passed a single parameter - the graph object. With this you can get references to the canvas and context. There's an example of this below.
<script> window.onload = function () { var line = new RGraph.Line('myLine', [45,12,16,18,44,54,23,21,56]); line.Set('chart.tooltips', ['Fred', 'Barney', 'Jay', 'Pete', 'Frank', 'Bob', 'Ted', 'Lou', 'Kev']); line.Set('chart.labels', ['Fred', 'Barney', 'Jay', 'Pete', 'Frank', 'Bob', 'Ted', 'Lou', 'Kev']); line.Set('chart.hmargin', 5); line.Set('chart.tickmarks', 'dot'); line.Draw(); /** * This is the call to the RGraph function that registers the event listener * * line: The graph object * ontooltip: The name of the event * myFunc: The function that handles the event */ RGraph.AddCustomEventListener(line, 'ontooltip', myFunc); } /** * The function that is called when the ontooltip event fires. It is passed a single parameter - the graph object. * With this you can get the ID and references to the canvas and context: * o obj.id * o obj.canvas * o obj.context */ function myFunc(obj) { var id = obj.id; var canvas = obj.canvas; var context = obj.context; alert('This alert was triggered by the custom ontooltip event'); } </script>
ontooltip
This event fires immediately after a tooltip has been created. This event allows you to easily show graphs in your tooltips (tooltip
effects that involve moving the tooltip, eg. contract, expand & snap, will not function). You
can find the tooltip object in the RGraph registry - RGraph.Registry.Get('chart.tooltip'). Note that if you're testing and
using a function that pauses execution (eg alert()), this will also pause any timers (for animation effects etc). If you want to
avoid this you should use a function that doesn't block execution, eg the Firebug/WebKit function, console.log() (you can use the
cl() shortcut in RGraph).
oncontextmenu
This event fires immediately after the RGraph context menu is shown. If you want it, you can get at the context menu in the
RGraph registry: RGraph.Registry.Get('chart.contextmenu') Like the ontooltip event, using alert() can
pause the fade in timers, so you should consider using the Firebug/Webkit console.log functions instead.
onbeforedraw
Much like the ondraw event, however this fires at the start of the .Draw() method, in effect "before" the method.
ondraw
The ondraw event fires after the .Draw() method has run. Note that the interactive features of RGraph may call the .Draw()
method multiple times - the zoom in area mode is a prime example.
A graph with tooltips is also an example. In this case it would demonstrate that the .Draw() method is called twice (and
hence the ondraw event), whereas the ontooltip event only fires once.
Note: The ondraw event is not only fired by its own graph,
but (if you're using tooltips for example), can also be fired by other graphs on the page.
onzoom
The onzoom event fires whenever the canvas is zoomed. When the zoom is in area and canvas modes this fires once,
but when in thumbnail mode this event is like the onmousemove event in that it fires whenever the mouse is moved.
onmodaldialog
The onmodaldialog event fires when the ModalDialog is shown. This event is easily replicated yourself, though using this event
may help you to keep your code tidy. This event is utilised slightly differently to the other events:
ModalDialog.AddCustomEventListener('onmodaldialog', function () {alert('Hello world!');});
onresize
The onresize event fires when a canvas is resized. It also fires when the canvas is reset to the original size.
onadjust
The onadjust event fires whenever one of the supported graph types is adjusted. It usually fires in conjunction with the
onmousemove event, and can be blocked by alert(). You therefore may need to use a different function (eg console.log())
whilst debugging.
onannotatestart
The onannotatestart event fires at the beginning of the annotating procedure (ie in a similar vein to the onmousedown event).
onannotate
The onannotate event fires when the graph has been annotated. It fires during the annotate procedure.
onannotateend
The onannotateend event fires at the end of the annotating procedure (ie in a similar vein to the onmouseup event).