166

Is it possible using Chart.js to display data values?

I want to print the graph.

Thanks for any advice..

1
  • my graph is working perfectly ..i just want to display data values in my LineBar chart.. then i can print my graphs.. because now i can display data values just by mouse event
    – FuSsA
    Jul 25, 2015 at 21:41

13 Answers 13

181

There is an official plugin for Chart.js 2.7.0+ to do this: Datalabels

Otherwise, you can loop through the points / bars onAnimationComplete and display the values


Preview

Enter image description here


HTML

<canvas id="myChart1" height="300" width="500"></canvas>
<canvas id="myChart2" height="300" width="500"></canvas>

Script

var chartData = {
    labels: ["January", "February", "March", "April", "May", "June"],
    datasets: [
        {
            fillColor: "#79D1CF",
            strokeColor: "#79D1CF",
            data: [60, 80, 81, 56, 55, 40]
        }
    ]
};

var ctx = document.getElementById("myChart1").getContext("2d");
var myLine = new Chart(ctx).Line(chartData, {
    showTooltips: false,
    onAnimationComplete: function () {

        var ctx = this.chart.ctx;
        ctx.font = this.scale.font;
        ctx.fillStyle = this.scale.textColor
        ctx.textAlign = "center";
        ctx.textBaseline = "bottom";

        this.datasets.forEach(function (dataset) {
            dataset.points.forEach(function (points) {
                ctx.fillText(points.value, points.x, points.y - 10);
            });
        })
    }
});

var ctx = document.getElementById("myChart2").getContext("2d");
var myBar = new Chart(ctx).Bar(chartData, {
    showTooltips: false,
    onAnimationComplete: function () {

        var ctx = this.chart.ctx;
        ctx.font = this.scale.font;
        ctx.fillStyle = this.scale.textColor
        ctx.textAlign = "center";
        ctx.textBaseline = "bottom";

        this.datasets.forEach(function (dataset) {
            dataset.bars.forEach(function (bar) {
                ctx.fillText(bar.value, bar.x, bar.y - 5);
            });
        })
    }
});

Fiddle - http://jsfiddle.net/uh9vw0ao/

14
  • What if i had two line chart in the same Chart ?
    – FuSsA
    Jul 26, 2015 at 12:08
  • 1
    With the above it would still show the values, but you might see an overlap if the points are too close to each other. But you can always put in logic to change the value position. Like for instance - jsfiddle.net/hh719qex if you have a color printer. If you have only 2 series you could also do stuff like setting the textBaseline different IF the 2 points are 2 close to each other. Jul 26, 2015 at 12:21
  • 6
    this was for the v1.0.2 how to do this for v2.1.3?The object structure is different in the later version.
    – techie_28
    Aug 24, 2016 at 6:16
  • 2
    @potatopeelings I have used the onComplete callback here but it also fires when the mouseover is on the bar's of the chart causing the number to blink due to redraw.Would that be same if onAnimationComplete? I am unable to use this callback with my existing chart code (see var chartBar at the bottom pastebin.com/tT7yTkGh)
    – techie_28
    Aug 24, 2016 at 7:19
  • 1
    I need both tool tip and data on top of the bar in my graph. When tool tip is showing, the data on top of the bar is turned to white colour which is visible in my transparent tool tip. How can I fix this?
    – LJP
    Nov 19, 2018 at 8:03
94

This works for Chart.js 2.3, including for both line/bar types.

Important: Even if you don't need the animation, don't change the duration option to 0. Otherwise, you will get chartInstance.controller is undefined error.

var chartData = {
    labels: ["January", "February", "March", "April", "May", "June"],
        datasets: [
            {
                fillColor: "#79D1CF",
                strokeColor: "#79D1CF",
                data: [60, 80, 81, 56, 55, 40]
            }
        ]
    };

var opt = {
    events: false,
    tooltips: {
        enabled: false
    },
    hover: {
        animationDuration: 0
    },
    animation: {
        duration: 1,
        onComplete: function () {
            var chartInstance = this.chart,
                ctx = chartInstance.ctx;
            ctx.font = Chart.helpers.fontString(Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontSize, Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontStyle, Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontFamily);
            ctx.textAlign = 'center';
            ctx.textBaseline = 'bottom';

            this.data.datasets.forEach(function (dataset, i) {
                var meta = chartInstance.controller.getDatasetMeta(i);
                meta.data.forEach(function (bar, index) {
                    var data = dataset.data[index];
                    ctx.fillText(data, bar._model.x, bar._model.y - 5);
                });
            });
        }
    }
};
var ctx = document.getElementById("Chart1"),
    myLineChart = new Chart(ctx, {
       type: 'bar',
       data: chartData,
       options: opt
    });
<canvas id="myChart1" height="300" width="500"></canvas>

9
  • 1
    I get "Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read property '0' of undefined" when trying this on bar graphs. Do bars use something other than "dataset.metaData[i]._model"? Jun 2, 2016 at 19:08
  • It's actually var model = dataset._meta[i].data[0]._model;
    – Flanamacca
    Jun 8, 2016 at 2:29
  • That's also not the full truth. I still get exceptions. Will try to figure it out.
    – val
    Jun 19, 2016 at 9:34
  • var model = dataset._meta[0].data[i]._model; actually.
    – brian
    Jul 2, 2016 at 20:03
  • 2
    Looks like it is not as simple as _meta[0]. In fact the _meta object isn't an array, it has a single element with a number as the key. I can't figure out the rationale behind what the number will be so I just take the first element by looking in the keys list, like this : var model = dataset._meta[Object.keys(dataset._meta)[0]].data[i]._model; Jul 10, 2016 at 12:32
54

If you are using the plugin chartjs-plugin-datalabels then the following code options object will help.

Make sure you import import ChartDataLabels from 'chartjs-plugin-datalabels'; in your TypeScript file or add reference to <script src="chartjs-plugin-datalabels.js"></script> in your javascript file and register the plugin using ChartJS.register(ChartDataLabels).

options: {
    maintainAspectRatio: false,
    responsive: true,
    scales: {
        yAxes: [{
            ticks: {
                beginAtZero: true,
            }
        }]
    },
    plugins: {
        datalabels: {
            anchor: 'end',
            align: 'top',
            formatter: Math.round,
            font: {
                weight: 'bold'
            }
        }
    }
}
5
  • 4
    Your answer is so simple and worked for me. Thank you. Happy coding. May 15, 2019 at 12:23
  • 3
    Really nice solution! Thank you kind stranger :-*
    – HasBert
    Aug 20, 2020 at 11:44
  • 2
    This is the best!
    – seunggabi
    Jan 11, 2021 at 15:14
  • 5
    This plugin no longer registers itself automatically. It must be manually registered Chart.register(ChartDataLabels);
    – Thanooshan
    Jun 17, 2022 at 18:43
  • This is the best and simpler answer here, no mumbo-jumbo needed to get it working. Dec 16, 2022 at 2:36
36

This animation option works for 2.1.3 on a bar chart.

Slightly modified Ross answer:

animation: {
    duration: 0,
    onComplete: function () {
        // render the value of the chart above the bar
        var ctx = this.chart.ctx;
        ctx.font = Chart.helpers.fontString(Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontSize, 'normal', Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontFamily);
        ctx.fillStyle = this.chart.config.options.defaultFontColor;
        ctx.textAlign = 'center';
        ctx.textBaseline = 'bottom';
        this.data.datasets.forEach(function (dataset) {
            for (var i = 0; i < dataset.data.length; i++) {
                var model = dataset._meta[Object.keys(dataset._meta)[0]].data[i]._model;
                ctx.fillText(dataset.data[i], model.x, model.y - 5);
            }
        });
    }
}
6
  • 4
    I also had to set hover: {animationDuration: 0} to stop the labels animating away on hover
    – iamyojimbo
    Sep 30, 2016 at 14:25
  • 1
    Also, note that if you want to hide labels when you hide something from the legend, you need to add the following before the forEach loop: .filter(dataset => !dataset._meta[0].hidden)
    – iamyojimbo
    Sep 30, 2016 at 16:01
  • 1
    This method causes the values to clip if there's not enough room above the bars. Oct 6, 2016 at 7:48
  • 2
    Can't believe it's that ugly ^^ nice job
    – La masse
    Nov 1, 2016 at 20:51
  • Looks good, but blinks when tooltips are re-drawn. Also does not process collisions on combined charts and cumulative data labels for stacked bars – that will of course require more coding.
    – dma_k
    Feb 13, 2017 at 19:35
26

Based on Ross's answer for Chart.js 2.0 and up, I had to include a little tweak to guard against the case when the bar's heights comes too chose to the scale boundary.

Example

The animation attribute of the bar chart's option:

animation: {
            duration: 500,
            easing: "easeOutQuart",
            onComplete: function () {
                var ctx = this.chart.ctx;
                ctx.font = Chart.helpers.fontString(Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontFamily, 'normal', Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontFamily);
                ctx.textAlign = 'center';
                ctx.textBaseline = 'bottom';

                this.data.datasets.forEach(function (dataset) {
                    for (var i = 0; i < dataset.data.length; i++) {
                        var model = dataset._meta[Object.keys(dataset._meta)[0]].data[i]._model,
                            scale_max = dataset._meta[Object.keys(dataset._meta)[0]].data[i]._yScale.maxHeight;
                        ctx.fillStyle = '#444';
                        var y_pos = model.y - 5;
                        // Make sure data value does not get overflown and hidden
                        // when the bar's value is too close to max value of scale
                        // Note: The y value is reverse, it counts from top down
                        if ((scale_max - model.y) / scale_max >= 0.93)
                            y_pos = model.y + 20;
                        ctx.fillText(dataset.data[i], model.x, y_pos);
                    }
                });
            }
        }
4
  • The text blinks on mouseover of the chart.. I tried calling ctx.save() at the end but it did not help
    – techie_28
    Aug 24, 2016 at 6:41
  • the onComplete call back is executed when I hovered on the bar's which causes the redraw & text appears to blink.Would this be the same with onAnimationComplete as well?I am unable to use the onAnimationComplete call back with my existing code (see var chartBar at the bottom of pastebin.com/tT7yTkGh
    – techie_28
    Aug 24, 2016 at 7:17
  • Is it possible to do the same in pie chart Oct 3, 2017 at 21:00
  • @RaviKhambhati Yes, you can check it out in this answer: stackoverflow.com/a/38797604/6402571
    – Hung Tran
    Nov 19, 2017 at 7:19
22

I think the nicest option to do this in Chart.js v2.x is by using a plugin, so you don't have a large block of code in the options. In addition, it prevents the data from disappearing when hovering over a bar.

I.e., simply use this code, which registers a plugin that adds the text after the chart is drawn.

Chart.pluginService.register({
    afterDraw: function(chartInstance) {
        var ctx = chartInstance.chart.ctx;

        // render the value of the chart above the bar
        ctx.font = Chart.helpers.fontString(Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontSize, 'normal', Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontFamily);
        ctx.textAlign = 'center';
        ctx.textBaseline = 'bottom';

        chartInstance.data.datasets.forEach(function (dataset) {
            for (var i = 0; i < dataset.data.length; i++) {
                var model = dataset._meta[Object.keys(dataset._meta)[0]].data[i]._model;
                ctx.fillText(dataset.data[i], model.x, model.y - 2);
            }
        });
  }
});
3
  • Chart.plugins.register({
    – hasentopf
    Aug 26, 2016 at 12:00
  • I had to use Chart.defaults.global.tooltips.enabled = false;. The issue with that solution is that the afterDraw function is called hundreds of times, probably generating CPU overhead. Still, it's the only answer for now without blinks. If you need a better rendering for horizontalBar charts, use ctx.textAlign = 'left'; ctx.textBaseline = 'middle'; and ctx.fillText(dataset.data[i], model.x+5, model.y);.
    – KrisWebDev
    Sep 17, 2016 at 16:06
  • a far more cleaner and modular solution. Jan 21, 2017 at 14:43
9

Following this good answer, I'd use these options for a bar chart:

var chartOptions = {
    animation: false,
    responsive : true,
    tooltipTemplate: "<%= value %>",
    tooltipFillColor: "rgba(0,0,0,0)",
    tooltipFontColor: "#444",
    tooltipEvents: [],
    tooltipCaretSize: 0,
    onAnimationComplete: function()
    {
        this.showTooltip(this.datasets[0].bars, true);
    }
};

window.myBar = new Chart(ctx1).Bar(chartData, chartOptions);

Bar Chart

This still uses the tooltip system and his advantages (automatic positionning, templating, ...) but hiding the decorations (background color, caret, ...)

2
  • Implementation may change depending on chart type. For a line chart, for example, it's this.datasets[0].points instead of .bars. I do prefer this solution because it uses the tooltip system. Mar 13, 2016 at 21:16
  • 1
    This solution for an earlier version.How to achieve this for the latest version i.e 2.1.3. I have used the potatopeelings & Huang Trang answers in the animations onComplete callback but it is triggered even when hovered over the bars of the chart which causes the text to redraw & give an unwanted blink effect.I also tried afterDraw & it is all same.Strangely it doesnt happen in fiddle provided by potatopeelings.Any Ideas plz?
    – techie_28
    Aug 26, 2016 at 8:37
9

I'd recommend using this plugin: datalabels

Labels can be added to your charts simply by importing the plugin into the JavaScript file, for example:

import 'chartjs-plugin-datalabels'

And can be fine-tuned using this documentation: https://chartjs-plugin-datalabels.netlify.com/options.html

4
  • 5
    Easiest one, does not require "code", just customization using the standard "options" object. A heads-up: minimum required charts.js version is 2.7.0, I was referencing 2.5.0 from CDN and there were no changes on the charts...
    – GBU
    Mar 8, 2018 at 19:42
  • @GBU what is the option attribute ?.
    – Bhimbim
    Nov 20, 2019 at 16:12
  • 1
    Also note this is an Official chartjs plugin, not a 3rd party helper Jan 7, 2021 at 1:21
  • The second link is broken (404). Jan 14, 2022 at 17:30
9

Adapted the @Ross answer to work with 3.7.0 version of the Chartjs

animation: {
        duration: 0,
        onComplete: function() {
            ctx = this.ctx;
            ctx.font = Chart.helpers.fontString(Chart.defaults.font.size, Chart.defaults.font.style, Chart.defaults.font.family);
            ctx.textAlign = 'center';
            ctx.textBaseline = 'bottom';
            chartinst = this;
            this.data.datasets.forEach(function(dataset, i) {
                if(chartinst.isDatasetVisible(i)){
                    var meta = chartinst.getDatasetMeta(i);
                    meta.data.forEach(function(bar, index) {
                        var data = dataset.data[index];
                        ctx.fillText(data, bar.x, bar.y - 5);
                    });
                }
            });
        }
    }

In this case, animation can be 0 To have a nicer looking, you can disable the hover and the tooltip if you want a more "static" visualization

Also, the isDataSetVisible works to get rid of the numbers that stay shown when you hide the dataset in case of multiple datasets

5
  • 2
    Thanks for this. It works even on 3.9.1.
    – JayB
    Sep 8, 2022 at 18:36
  • I tried ALL answers before that aimed at version 2. This is the one that works with Chart.js 3+. Thanks a lot. – Only on mouse over the labels disappear and the mouse tooltip appears instead.
    – Avatar
    Sep 30, 2022 at 7:03
  • One question remains: How to label the sectors of a pie chart. The answer can be found here: stackoverflow.com/a/71655568/1066234
    – Avatar
    Sep 30, 2022 at 9:35
  • This is what worked for me out of everything here (v3.3.2)
    – Jay Are
    Jun 18, 2023 at 5:27
  • it worked for version 4.3.0
    – Ariwibawa
    Jun 23, 2023 at 13:20
7

From my experience, once you include the chartjs-plugin-datalabels plugin (make sure to place the <script> tag after the chart.js tag on your page), your charts begin to display values.

If you then choose you can customize it to fit your needs. The customization is clearly documented here but basically, the format is like this hypothetical example:

var myBarChart = new Chart(ctx, {
    type: 'bar',
    data: yourDataObject,
    options: {
        // other options
        plugins: {
            datalabels: {
                anchor :'end',
                align :'top',
                // and if you need to format how the value is displayed...
                formatter: function(value, context) {
                    return GetValueFormatted(value);
                }
            }
        }
    }
});
7

From Chart.js samples (file Chart.js-2.4.0/samples/data_labelling.html):

        // Define a plugin to provide data labels

        Chart.plugins.register({
            afterDatasetsDraw: function(chartInstance, easing) {
                // To only draw at the end of animation, check for easing === 1
                var ctx = chartInstance.chart.ctx;

                chartInstance.data.datasets.forEach(function (dataset, i) {
                    var meta = chartInstance.getDatasetMeta(i);
                    if (!meta.hidden) {
                        meta.data.forEach(function(element, index) {
                            // Draw the text in black, with the specified font
                            ctx.fillStyle = 'rgb(0, 0, 0)';

                            var fontSize = 16;
                            var fontStyle = 'normal';
                            var fontFamily = 'Helvetica Neue';
                            ctx.font = Chart.helpers.fontString(fontSize, fontStyle, fontFamily);

                            // Just naively convert to string for now
                            var dataString = dataset.data[index].toString();

                            // Make sure alignment settings are correct
                            ctx.textAlign = 'center';
                            ctx.textBaseline = 'middle';

                            var padding = 5;
                            var position = element.tooltipPosition();
                            ctx.fillText(dataString, position.x, position.y - (fontSize / 2) - padding);
                        });
                    }
                });
            }
        });
3
  • I added a line to this for alignment on a Horizontal Bar Chart by doing if(chart.config.type == "horizontalBar") then defining a custom vertical padding of 10 to center align it. Jul 21, 2017 at 16:50
  • Even with the reference and code comments, an explanation would be in order. E.g., what is the idea/gist? What are the properties of this solution? In what way does it solve the problem in the question? Pros/cons? Etc. From the Help Center: "...always explain why the solution you're presenting is appropriate and how it works". Please respond by editing (changing) your answer, not here in comments (without "Edit:", "Update:", or similar - the answer should appear as if it was written today). Jan 14, 2022 at 17:26
  • OK, the OP seems to have left the building, so this is unlikely to ever happen. Perhaps somebody else can chime in and reverse engineer this and provide the information? Jan 14, 2022 at 17:27
6

I edited Aaron Hudon's answer a little, but only for bar charts. My version adds:

  • Fade in animation for the values.
  • Prevent clipping by positioning the value inside the bar if the bar is too high.
  • No blinking.

Example

Downside: When hovering over a bar that has a value inside it, the value might look a little jagged. I have not found a solution do disable hover effects. It might also need tweaking depending on your own settings.

Configuration:

bar: {
  tooltips: {
    enabled: false
  },
  hover: {
    animationDuration: 0
  },
  animation: {
    onComplete: function() {
      this.chart.controller.draw();
      drawValue(this, 1);
    },
    onProgress: function(state) {
      var animation = state.animationObject;
      drawValue(this, animation.currentStep / animation.numSteps);
    }
  }
}

Helpers:

// Font color for values inside the bar
var insideFontColor = '255,255,255';
// Font color for values above the bar
var outsideFontColor = '0,0,0';
// How close to the top edge bar can be before the value is put inside it
var topThreshold = 20;

var modifyCtx = function(ctx) {
  ctx.font = Chart.helpers.fontString(Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontSize, 'normal', Chart.defaults.global.defaultFontFamily);
  ctx.textAlign = 'center';
  ctx.textBaseline = 'bottom';
  return ctx;
};

var fadeIn = function(ctx, obj, x, y, black, step) {
  var ctx = modifyCtx(ctx);
  var alpha = 0;
  ctx.fillStyle = black ? 'rgba(' + outsideFontColor + ',' + step + ')' : 'rgba(' + insideFontColor + ',' + step + ')';
  ctx.fillText(obj, x, y);
};

var drawValue = function(context, step) {
  var ctx = context.chart.ctx;

  context.data.datasets.forEach(function (dataset) {
    for (var i = 0; i < dataset.data.length; i++) {
      var model = dataset._meta[Object.keys(dataset._meta)[0]].data[i]._model;
      var textY = (model.y > topThreshold) ? model.y - 3 : model.y + 20;
      fadeIn(ctx, dataset.data[i], model.x, textY, model.y > topThreshold, step);
    }
  });
};
4
  • Janne, thank you for the solution, it looks great. But I have a situation where my values are actually kinda big (5 decimal numbers), and when the screen size is small or I have many charts, the numbers are on top of each other. Is there any way to make this work with responsivity? Like, make the numbers rotate when there is no space, just like the labels below the bar?
    – Phiter
    Oct 27, 2016 at 10:47
  • @PhiterFernandes I think it should be possible to rotate by checking current screen size in the modifyCtx function and using ctx.rotate. However I'm not sure how to compare the value size to the available space to determine when to rotate. Oct 27, 2016 at 11:01
  • The modifyCtx function only works once, and not on resize, right? I'll take a look at the chart.js source code and see where they do the rotation of the labels in the x axis. If I see something I'll try to do something and tell you in here, ok? =)
    – Phiter
    Oct 27, 2016 at 11:04
  • I have found something on the version 2.3.0, line 7075. calculateTickRotation, it's inside the Scale function. I'll analyze it.
    – Phiter
    Oct 27, 2016 at 11:06
0

To prevent your numbers from being cut off if they're too close to the top of the canvas:

yAxes: [{
    ticks: {
        stepSize: Math.round((1.05*(Math.max.apply(Math, myListOfyValues)) / 10)/5)*5,
        suggestedMax: 1.05*(Math.max.apply(Math, myListOfyValues)),
        beginAtZero: true,
        precision: 0
    }
}]
  • 10 = the number of ticks

  • 5 = rounds tick values to the nearest 5 - all y values will be incremented evenly

  • 1.05 = increases the maximum y axis tick value so the numbers don't get cut off

Something similar will work for xAxes too.

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