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I'm using the highcharts data module to build a chart from an html table. In the data configuration of the chart I just have:

data: {
    table: table
}

But if I have string values such as "null", "NA", or even comma separators in the HTML table I get highcharts error 14, 'string value passed to chart...'

What I've tried:

Since HC should be able to handle null values I replaced NA will null in the tables. I also tried just leaving the blanks "" blank. But the issue is with the thousand separators. So I added thousandsSep: ',' hoping the chart output would understand that commas are part of the display but that doesn't work.

My next thought was to use a formatter function:

data: {
    table: function(){...change strings to float etc}
}

None of my attempts at the latter seem to work as I can't figure out what the data object looks like when accessed from a table. Any advice would be appreciated.

2
  • 1
    What kinds of non-integer values can appear in your table? You mention "NA" and numbers with thousand separators ("1,234.00"). Are those all the other formats? In any case a JSFiddle helps a lot in resolving the issue. Nov 8, 2016 at 7:32
  • jsfiddle.net/erd7236x
    – a_h
    Nov 8, 2016 at 16:32

1 Answer 1

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A solution that seems to have fixed the issue was to add a "parsed" function here is the api reference: http://api.highcharts.com/highcharts/data.parsed

I added the following to the data property:

data: {
        table: 'datatable',
        parsed: function()
        {
         var chartData = this.columns;
         var nData = [];
         for(var a in chartData)
         {
            var tempArray = [];
            for(var e in chartData[a])
          {
            var v = chartData[a][e].replace(/\,/g,"").replace("NA","0");
            /\d/g.test(v) == true ? v = parseFloat(v) : v = v;
            tempArray.push(v);
          }
          nData.push(tempArray);
         }
         this.columns = nData;
         //alert(JSON.stringify(nData));
         //this.columns = [];
         //this.columns.push(nData[0]);
         //this.columns.push(nData[1]);
        }
    },

...etc

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