mirror of
https://github.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter.git
synced 2024-11-16 02:25:50 +08:00
171 lines
7.5 KiB
Markdown
171 lines
7.5 KiB
Markdown
[Back to JKQTPlotter main page](https://github.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter/)
|
|
|
|
# JKQtPlotter
|
|
|
|
## Date/Time Axes
|
|
|
|
### Date Axis
|
|
This project (see `./test/simpletest_dateaxes/`) simply creates a JKQtPlotter widget (as a new window) with the X-axis showing time or date(-time) values, formated as such.
|
|
|
|
The source code of the main application can be found in [`jkqtplotter_simpletest_dateaxes.cpp`](https://github.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter/blob/master/test/simpletest_dateaxes/jkqtplotter_simpletest_dateaxes.cpp).
|
|
|
|
First some data is parsed from a CSV-file (added as ressource to the example). Note that the Time/date or Date+Time data is internally stored as milliseconds since epoc (Jan 1st 1970, 00:00:00), therefore data has to be converted accordingly before beeing added to the graph.
|
|
|
|
```c++
|
|
QVector<double> date;
|
|
QVector<double> temperature, temperature_min, temperature_max;
|
|
// parse a textfile with comments on the first line and the
|
|
// semicolon separated data. The first column is a date and time
|
|
// the second to fourth columns contain a floating-point number
|
|
// with temperature average, min and max
|
|
QFile file(":/weatherdata_gelsenkirchen.csv");
|
|
file.open(QFile::ReadOnly|QFile::Text);
|
|
file.readLine(); // eat comment
|
|
while (!file.atEnd()) {
|
|
QString line=file.readLine();
|
|
QTextStream in(&line);
|
|
QStringList items=line.split(";");
|
|
// date/time values are stored as doubles representing the corresponding number of milliseconds sind epoch
|
|
date<<QDateTime::fromString(items[0], Qt::ISODate).toUTC().toMSecsSinceEpoch();
|
|
// store Heidelbergs daily temperature
|
|
temperature<<items[1].toDouble();
|
|
temperature_min<<items[2].toDouble();
|
|
temperature_max<<items[3].toDouble();
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The parsed data looks like this:
|
|
```
|
|
ISO-Date+Time;Temp_mean[degC];Temp_min[degC];Temp_max[degC]; data from http://wetter.mpg-ge.de/NOAA/NOAA-2018.txt and http://wetter.mpg-ge.de/NOAA/NOAA-2017.txt
|
|
2017-01-15T12:00; 1.2; -1.2; 3.7
|
|
2017-02-15T12:00; 5.6; 3.2; 8.1
|
|
2017-03-15T12:00; 9.6; 6.2; 13.5
|
|
...
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Then two graphs are added. One of type `JKQTPfilledVerticalRangeGraph` plots the range of min+max temperature for each month:
|
|
```c++
|
|
// 3. add a plot for the data mean line (graphTemperature) and range (graphTemperatureRange)
|
|
JKQTPfilledVerticalRangeGraph* graphTemperatureRange=new JKQTPfilledVerticalRangeGraph(&plot);
|
|
|
|
// 4. copy data into datastore and immediately set the yColumn
|
|
size_t colDate=ds->addCopiedColumn(date, "date");
|
|
graphTemperatureRange->set_xColumn(colDate);
|
|
graphTemperatureRange->set_yColumn(ds->addCopiedColumn(temperature_min, "temperature_min"));
|
|
graphTemperatureRange->set_yColumn2(ds->addCopiedColumn(temperature_max, "temperature_max"));
|
|
|
|
|
|
// 5. min/max range data
|
|
// graph fill color is a lighter shade of the average graph
|
|
graphTemperatureRange->set_fillColor(graphTemperature->get_color().lighter());
|
|
// don't draw lines of the data
|
|
graphTemperatureRange->set_drawLine(false);
|
|
// plot label in key
|
|
graphTemperatureRange->set_title("Min/Max Temperature");
|
|
// add the graph to the plot, so it is actually displayed
|
|
plot.addGraph(graphTemperatureRange);
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
On top of that plot, a second plot is added, which draws the average temperatures of each month as a line:
|
|
|
|
```c++
|
|
// 3. add a plot for the data mean line (graphTemperature) and range (graphTemperatureRange)
|
|
JKQTPxyLineErrorGraph* graphTemperature=new JKQTPxyLineErrorGraph(&plot);
|
|
|
|
// 4. copy data into datastore and immediately set the yColumn
|
|
size_t colDate=ds->addCopiedColumn(date, "date");
|
|
graphTemperature->set_xColumn(colDate);
|
|
graphTemperature->set_yColumn(ds->addCopiedColumn(temperature, "temperature"));
|
|
|
|
|
|
// 5. min/max range data
|
|
// .... see above
|
|
|
|
// 6. average data
|
|
// don't use symbols
|
|
graphTemperature->set_symbol(JKQTPnoSymbol);
|
|
// set the line width
|
|
graphTemperature->set_lineWidth(1);
|
|
// draw small symbols
|
|
graphTemperature->set_symbolSize(6);
|
|
// graph title
|
|
graphTemperature->set_title("Average Temperature");
|
|
// add the graph to the plot, so it is actually displayed
|
|
plot.addGraph(graphTemperature);
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Finally the x-axis is formatted to display dates (see [Qt-Documentation of `QDateTime::toString()`]((http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qdatetime.html#toString) for details on the formating strings):
|
|
```c++
|
|
// 7. format the plot
|
|
// set the title above the plot, use LaTeX instructions to make text bold
|
|
plot.get_plotter()->set_plotLabel("\\textbf{Weather in Gelsenkirchen, 2017-2018}");
|
|
// set x-axis date-time-axis
|
|
plot.getXAxis()->set_labelType(JKQTPCALTdatetime);
|
|
plot.getXAxis()->set_axisLabel("Date");
|
|
// set format string for date axis (e.g. Jan '18), see Documentation of QDateTime::toString()
|
|
plot.getXAxis()->set_tickDateTimeFormat("MMM ''yy");
|
|
// set y-axis temperature axis
|
|
plot.getYAxis()->set_axisLabel("Average Daily Temperature [{\\degree}C]");
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The result looks like this:
|
|
|
|
![jkqtplotter_simpletest_symbols_and_styles](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter/master/screenshots/jkqtplotter_simpletest_dateaxes.png)
|
|
|
|
|
|
### Time Axis
|
|
A second variant (see the example CPP-file) displays data with a time-axis:
|
|
|
|
![jkqtplotter_simpletest_symbols_and_styles](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter/master/screenshots/jkqtplotter_simpletest_dateaxes_timeaxis.png)
|
|
|
|
|
|
For that example data-pasring is a bit different, because the file only contains times and no dates:
|
|
```c++
|
|
// 2. now we create data vectors with data parsed from a CSV-file
|
|
QVector<double> time;
|
|
QVector<double> temperature;
|
|
// parse a textfile with comments on the first line and the
|
|
// semicolon separated data. The first column is a time
|
|
// the second contain a floating-point number with temperatures
|
|
QFile file(":/weatherdata_heidelberg_2018-10-14.csv");
|
|
file.open(QFile::ReadOnly|QFile::Text);
|
|
file.readLine(); // eat comment
|
|
while (!file.atEnd()) {
|
|
QString line=file.readLine();
|
|
QTextStream in(&line);
|
|
QStringList items=line.split(";");
|
|
// date/time values are stored as doubles representing the corresponding
|
|
// number of milliseconds sind epoch. Since the data is time only, we have to use an arbitrary
|
|
// date as basis
|
|
time<<QDateTime::fromString("1970-01-01T"+items[0], Qt::ISODate).toUTC().toMSecsSinceEpoch();
|
|
// store Heidelbergs daily temperature
|
|
temperature<<items[1].toDouble();
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The parsed data looks like this:
|
|
```
|
|
Time; Temperature [degC]
|
|
00:00:00; 24.2
|
|
00:10:00; 24.2
|
|
00:20:00; 24.1
|
|
00:30:00; 24.1
|
|
...
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Axis formating for this example is done like this:
|
|
```c++
|
|
// 7. format the plot
|
|
// set the title above the plot, use LaTeX instructions to make text bold
|
|
plot.get_plotter()->set_plotLabel("\\textbf{Weather in Heidelberg, 14^{th} Oct 2018}");
|
|
// set x-axis date-time-axis
|
|
plot.getXAxis()->set_labelType(JKQTPCALTtime);
|
|
plot.getXAxis()->set_axisLabel("Time of Day");
|
|
// set format string for time axis with 24-hour and minute only,
|
|
// see QDateTime::toString() documentation for details on format strings
|
|
plot.getXAxis()->set_tickTimeFormat("HH:mm");
|
|
// set y-axis temperature axis
|
|
plot.getYAxis()->set_axisLabel("Temperature [{\\degree}C]");
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
[Back to JKQTPlotter main page](https://github.com/jkriege2/JKQtPlotter/) |