I'm trying to draw the label lines as in picture using MPAndroidChart with a pie chart. I can't figure out how to
- decouple the lines from the chart
- draw that little circle at the beginning of the line.
Thank you.
This is by no means easy to achieve. To decouple the lines from the chart, you can use valueLinePart1OffsetPercentage
and play with line part lengths. But to get the chart to draw dots at the end of lines, you need a custom renderer. Here's one:
class CustomPieChartRenderer(pieChart: PieChart, val circleRadius: Float)
: PieChartRenderer(pieChart, pieChart.animator, pieChart.viewPortHandler) {
override fun drawValues(c: Canvas) {
super.drawValues(c)
val center = mChart.centerCircleBox
val radius = mChart.radius
var rotationAngle = mChart.rotationAngle
val drawAngles = mChart.drawAngles
val absoluteAngles = mChart.absoluteAngles
val phaseX = mAnimator.phaseX
val phaseY = mAnimator.phaseY
val roundedRadius = (radius - radius * mChart.holeRadius / 100f) / 2f
val holeRadiusPercent = mChart.holeRadius / 100f
var labelRadiusOffset = radius / 10f * 3.6f
if (mChart.isDrawHoleEnabled) {
labelRadiusOffset = (radius - radius * holeRadiusPercent) / 2f
if (!mChart.isDrawSlicesUnderHoleEnabled && mChart.isDrawRoundedSlicesEnabled) {
rotationAngle += roundedRadius * 360 / (Math.PI * 2 * radius).toFloat()
}
}
val labelRadius = radius - labelRadiusOffset
val dataSets = mChart.data.dataSets
var angle: Float
var xIndex = 0
c.save()
for (i in dataSets.indices) {
val dataSet = dataSets[i]
val sliceSpace = getSliceSpace(dataSet)
for (j in 0 until dataSet.entryCount) {
angle = if (xIndex == 0) 0f else absoluteAngles[xIndex - 1] * phaseX
val sliceAngle = drawAngles[xIndex]
val sliceSpaceMiddleAngle = sliceSpace / (Utils.FDEG2RAD * labelRadius)
angle += (sliceAngle - sliceSpaceMiddleAngle / 2f) / 2f
if (dataSet.valueLineColor != ColorTemplate.COLOR_NONE) {
val transformedAngle = rotationAngle + angle * phaseY
val sliceXBase = cos(transformedAngle * Utils.FDEG2RAD.toDouble()).toFloat()
val sliceYBase = sin(transformedAngle * Utils.FDEG2RAD.toDouble()).toFloat()
val valueLinePart1OffsetPercentage = dataSet.valueLinePart1OffsetPercentage / 100f
val line1Radius = if (mChart.isDrawHoleEnabled) {
(radius - radius * holeRadiusPercent) * valueLinePart1OffsetPercentage + radius * holeRadiusPercent
} else {
radius * valueLinePart1OffsetPercentage
}
val px = line1Radius * sliceXBase + center.x
val py = line1Radius * sliceYBase + center.y
if (dataSet.isUsingSliceColorAsValueLineColor) {
mRenderPaint.color = dataSet.getColor(j)
}
c.drawCircle(px, py, circleRadius, mRenderPaint)
}
xIndex++
}
}
MPPointF.recycleInstance(center)
c.restore()
}
}
This custom renderer extends the default pie chart renderer. I basically just copied the code from PieChartRenderer.drawValues
method, converted it to Kotlin, and removed everything that wasn't needed. I only kept the logic needed to determine the position of the points at the end of lines.
I tried to reproduce the image you showed:
val chart: PieChart = view.findViewById(R.id.pie_chart)
chart.setExtraOffsets(40f, 0f, 40f, 0f)
// Custom renderer used to add dots at the end of value lines.
chart.renderer = CustomPieChartRenderer(chart, 10f)
val dataSet = PieDataSet(listOf(
PieEntry(40f),
PieEntry(10f),
PieEntry(10f),
PieEntry(15f),
PieEntry(10f),
PieEntry(5f),
PieEntry(5f),
PieEntry(5f)
), "Pie chart")
// Chart colors
val colors = listOf(
Color.parseColor("#4777c0"),
Color.parseColor("#a374c6"),
Color.parseColor("#4fb3e8"),
Color.parseColor("#99cf43"),
Color.parseColor("#fdc135"),
Color.parseColor("#fd9a47"),
Color.parseColor("#eb6e7a"),
Color.parseColor("#6785c2"))
dataSet.colors = colors
dataSet.setValueTextColors(colors)
// Value lines
dataSet.valueLinePart1Length = 0.6f
dataSet.valueLinePart2Length = 0.3f
dataSet.valueLineWidth = 2f
dataSet.valueLinePart1OffsetPercentage = 115f // Line starts outside of chart
dataSet.isUsingSliceColorAsValueLineColor = true
// Value text appearance
dataSet.yValuePosition = PieDataSet.ValuePosition.OUTSIDE_SLICE
dataSet.valueTextSize = 16f
dataSet.valueTypeface = Typeface.DEFAULT_BOLD
// Value formatting
dataSet.valueFormatter = object : ValueFormatter() {
private val formatter = NumberFormat.getPercentInstance()
override fun getFormattedValue(value: Float) =
formatter.format(value / 100f)
}
chart.setUsePercentValues(true)
dataSet.selectionShift = 3f
// Hole
chart.isDrawHoleEnabled = true
chart.holeRadius = 50f
// Center text
chart.setDrawCenterText(true)
chart.setCenterTextSize(20f)
chart.setCenterTextTypeface(Typeface.DEFAULT_BOLD)
chart.setCenterTextColor(Color.parseColor("#222222"))
chart.centerText = "Center\ntext"
// Disable legend & description
chart.legend.isEnabled = false
chart.description = null
chart.data = PieData(dataSet)
Again, not very straightforward. I hope you like Kotlin! You can move most of that configuration code to a subclass if you need it often. Here's the result:
I'm not a MPAndroidChart expert. In fact, I've used it only once, and that was 2 years ago. But if you do your research, you can find a solution most of the time. Luckily, MPAndroidChart is a very customizable.