Commit 1d97fe13 authored by Hongli Lai (Phusion)'s avatar Hongli Lai (Phusion)

Convert PLUGINS to markdown format for better readability.

parent abc38e45
Writing plugins
---------------
===============
All you need to do to make a new plugin is creating an init function
and a set of options (if needed), stuffing it into an object and
putting it in the $.plot.plugins array. For example:
function myCoolPluginInit(plot) {
plot.coolstring = "Hello!";
};
function myCoolPluginInit(plot) {
plot.coolstring = "Hello!";
};
$.plot.plugins.push({ init: myCoolPluginInit, options: { ... } });
$.plot.plugins.push({ init: myCoolPluginInit, options: { ... } });
// if $.plot is called, it will return a plot object with the
// attribute "coolstring"
// if $.plot is called, it will return a plot object with the
// attribute "coolstring"
Now, given that the plugin might run in many different places, it's
a good idea to avoid leaking names. The usual trick here is wrap the
......@@ -21,10 +21,10 @@ this: (function () { inner code ... })(). To make it even more robust
in case $ is not bound to jQuery but some other Javascript library, we
can write it as
(function ($) {
// plugin definition
// ...
})(jQuery);
(function ($) {
// plugin definition
// ...
})(jQuery);
There's a complete example below, but you should also check out the
plugins bundled with Flot.
......@@ -37,37 +37,37 @@ Here is a simple debug plugin which alerts each of the series in the
plot. It has a single option that control whether it is enabled and
how much info to output:
(function ($) {
function init(plot) {
var debugLevel = 1;
function checkDebugEnabled(plot, options) {
if (options.debug) {
debugLevel = options.debug;
plot.hooks.processDatapoints.push(alertSeries);
(function ($) {
function init(plot) {
var debugLevel = 1;
function checkDebugEnabled(plot, options) {
if (options.debug) {
debugLevel = options.debug;
plot.hooks.processDatapoints.push(alertSeries);
}
}
}
function alertSeries(plot, series, datapoints) {
var msg = "series " + series.label;
if (debugLevel > 1)
msg += " with " + series.data.length + " points";
alert(msg);
function alertSeries(plot, series, datapoints) {
var msg = "series " + series.label;
if (debugLevel > 1)
msg += " with " + series.data.length + " points";
alert(msg);
}
plot.hooks.processOptions.push(checkDebugEnabled);
}
plot.hooks.processOptions.push(checkDebugEnabled);
}
var options = { debug: 0 };
$.plot.plugins.push({
init: init,
options: options,
name: "simpledebug",
version: "0.1"
});
})(jQuery);
var options = { debug: 0 };
$.plot.plugins.push({
init: init,
options: options,
name: "simpledebug",
version: "0.1"
});
})(jQuery);
We also define "name" and "version". It's not used by Flot, but might
be helpful for other plugins in resolving dependencies.
......@@ -75,7 +75,7 @@ be helpful for other plugins in resolving dependencies.
Put the above in a file named "jquery.flot.debug.js", include it in an
HTML page and then it can be used with:
$.plot($("#placeholder"), [...], { debug: 2 });
$.plot($("#placeholder"), [...], { debug: 2 });
This simple plugin illustrates a couple of points:
......@@ -120,14 +120,14 @@ If the plugin needs options that are specific to each series, like the
points or lines options in core Flot, you can put them in "series" in
the options object, e.g.
var options = {
series: {
downsample: {
algorithm: null,
maxpoints: 1000
var options = {
series: {
downsample: {
algorithm: null,
maxpoints: 1000
}
}
}
}
Then they will be copied by Flot into each series, providing default
values in case none are specified.
......
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