Common Props

Not every component uses all of these props. These are all common to things like VictoryBar, VictoryScatter, but other components like VictoryStack use only some of them.

The props explanations given here are general. Each component docs page should be considered as the source of truth for a component's props, and any caveats will be listed there.

animate

type: boolean || object

The animate prop specifies props for VictoryAnimation and VictoryTransition to use. The animate prop may be used to specify the duration, delay, and easing of an animation as well as the behavior of onEnter and onExit and onLoad transitions. Each Victory component defines its own default transitions, but these may be modified, or overwritten with the animate prop. An animationWhitelist may also be specified on the animate prop. When given, only props specified in the whitelist will animate.

See the Animations Guide for more detail on animations and transitions

example: animate={{ duration: 2000 }}

function App(props) {
  const [state, setState] = React.useState({
    data: getData(),
    size: getSize()
  });
  
  React.useEffect(() => {
    const setStateInterval = window.setInterval(() => {
      setState({
        data: getData(),
        size: getSize()
      });
    }, 3000);

    return () => {
      window.clearInterval(setStateInterval);
    };
  }, []);

  return (
    <VictoryChart
      domain={{ y: [0, 1] }}
      animate={{ duration: 2000 }}
    >
      <VictoryScatter
        size={state.size}
        data={state.data}
        style={{ data: { opacity: ({ datum }) => datum.opacity || 1 } }}
        animate={{
          animationWhitelist: ["style", "data", "size"], // Try removing "size"
          onExit: {
            duration: 500,
            before: () => ({ opacity: 0.3, _y: 0 })
          },
          onEnter: {
            duration: 500,
            before: () => ({ opacity: 0.3, _y: 0 }),
            after: (datum) => ({ opacity: 1, _y: datum._y })
          }
        }}
      />
    </VictoryChart>
  );
}

function getData() {
  const num = Math.floor(10 * Math.random() + 5);
  const points = new Array(num).fill(1);
  return points.map((point, index) => {
    return { x: index + 1, y: Math.random() };
  });
}

function getSize() {
  return Math.random() * 10
}

render(<App/>);

categories

type: array[string] || { x: array[string], y: array[string] }

The categories prop specifies how categorical data for a chart should be ordered. This prop should be given as an array of string values, or an object with these arrays of values specified for x and y. If this prop is not set, categorical data will be plotted in the order it was given in the data array.

note: The x value supplied to the categories prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will corresponds to the y axis.

example: categories={{ x: ["apples", "oranges", "bananas"] }}

<VictoryChart domainPadding={25}>
  <VictoryBar
    categories={{
      x: ["birds", "cats", "dogs", "fish", "frogs"]
    }}
    data={[
      {x: "cats", y: 1},
      {x: "dogs", y: 2},
      {x: "birds", y: 3},
      {x: "fish", y: 2},
      {x: "frogs", y: 1}
    ]}
  />
</VictoryChart>

containerComponent

type: element

The containerComponent prop takes a component instance which will be used to create a container element for standalone charts. If a containerComponent is not provided, the default VictoryContainer component will be used. Other Victory container components include:

Victory container components all support title and desc props, which are intended to add accessibility to Victory components. The more descriptive these props are, the more accessible your data will be for people using screen readers. These props may be set by passing them directly to the supplied component. By default, all Victory container components render responsive svg elements using the viewBox attribute. To render a static container, set responsive={false} directly on the container instance supplied via the containerComponent prop. All Victory container components also render a Portal element that may be used in conjunction with VictoryPortal to force components to render above other children.

Container components are supplied with the following props:

  • domain
  • height
  • horizontal
  • origin (for polar charts)
  • padding
  • polar
  • scale
  • standalone
  • style
  • theme
  • width

default: containerComponent={<VictoryContainer/>}

<VictoryScatter
  containerComponent={
    <VictoryCursorContainer
      cursorLabel={({ datum }) => `${datum.x.toPrecision(2)}, ${datum.y.toPrecision(2)}`}
    />
  }
/>

data

type: array[object]

Specify data via the data prop. By default, Victory components expect data as an array of objects with x and y properties. Use the x and y data accessor props to define a custom data format. The data prop must be given as an array. Data objects may also include information about ~~styles~~, labels, and props that may be applied to individual data components.

note: All values stored on the data object will be interpolated during animation. Do not store functions on data objects.

note As of victory@0.26.0 styles provided via the data prop are no longer automatically applied. To use styles from the data object, add functional styles as in the example below.

<VictoryScatter
  size={7}
  data={[
    { x: 1, y: 1, label: "first", symbol: "star", opacity: 0.5, fill: "blue" },
    { x: 2, y: 2, label: "second", symbol: "circle", opacity: 0.8, fill: "red" },
    { x: 3, y: 3, label: "third", symbol: "square", fill: "gold" },
    { x: 4, y: 4, label: "fourth", symbol: "diamond", fill: "green" }
  ]}
  style={{
    data: {
      fill: ({ datum }) => datum.fill,
      opacity: ({ datum }) => datum.opacity
    }
  }}
/>

dataComponent

type: element

The dataComponent prop takes a component instance which will be responsible for rendering a data element. The new element created from the passed dataComponent will be provided with all the props it needs to render. These props will always include data, events, scale and style. Individual components will supply additional props expected by their default dataComponents. See individual api docs for complete props lists. Any of these props may be overridden by passing in props to the supplied component, or modified or ignored within the custom component itself. If a dataComponent is not provided, each component will use its own default dataComponent.

See the Custom Components Guide for more detail on creating your own dataComponents

examples: dataComponent={<Area/>}

function CatPoint(props) {
  const {x, y, datum} = props; // VictoryScatter supplies x, y and datum
  const cat = datum._y >= 0 ? "😻" : "😹";

  return (
    <text x={x} y={y} fontSize={30}>
      {cat}
    </text>
  );
}

function App() {
  return (
    <VictoryChart>
      <VictoryScatter
        dataComponent={<CatPoint/>}
        y={(d) => Math.sin(2 * Math.PI * d.x)}
        samples={15}
      />
    </VictoryChart>
  );
}

render(<App/>);

disableInlineStyles

type: boolean

The disableInlineStyles prop allows Victory components to work better with CSS classes or styled-components. By default, Victory provides inline styles to chart components, which will override any conflicting CSS styles. This flag will remove the inline styles, making it easier to provide custom styling for components via CSS.

If this prop is passed to a chart type (e.g. VictoryBar), it will apply to all data and label components for that chart.


const StyledBar = styled(Bar)`
  fill: purple;
`

const StyledLabel = styled(VictoryLabel)`
  tspan {
    fill: magenta;
    font-family: Papyrus, fantasy;
  }
`

function CustomStyledBarChart() {
  return (
    <VictoryChart>
      <VictoryBar
        disableInlineStyles
        labels={[1, 2, 3, 4]}
        dataComponent={<StyledBar />}
        labelComponent={<StyledLabel />}
      />
    </VictoryChart>
  )
}

render(<CustomStyledBarChart/>);

It can also be passed to individual data or label components to disable styles on a more granular level.


const StyledBar = styled(Bar)`
  fill: purple;
`

function CustomStyledBarChart() {
  return (
    <VictoryChart>
      <VictoryBar
        labels={[1, 2, 3, 4]}
        dataComponent={<StyledBar disableInlineStyles />}
      />
    </VictoryChart>
  )
}

render(<CustomStyledBarChart/>);

domain

type: array[low, high] || { x: [low, high], y: [low, high] }

The domain prop describes the range of data the component will include. This prop can be given as an array of the minimum and maximum expected values of the data or as an object that specifies separate arrays for x and y. If this prop is not provided, a domain will be calculated from data, or other available information.

note: The x value supplied to the domain prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will corresponds to the y axis.

examples:

  • domain={[-1, 1]}
  • domain={{x: [0, 100], y: [0, 1]}}
<VictoryChart
   domain={{ x: [0.5, 5.5], y: [0, 10] }}
>
  <VictoryBar data={sampleData}/>
</VictoryChart>

domainPadding

type: number || array[left, right] || { x: [left, right], y: [bottom, top] }

The domainPadding prop specifies a number of pixels of padding to add to the beginning or end of a domain. This prop is useful for explicitly spacing data elements farther from the beginning or end of a domain to prevent axis crowding. When given as a single number, domainPadding will be applied to the upper and lower bound of both the x and y domains. This prop may also be given as an object with numbers or two-element arrays specified for x and y. When specifying arrays for domainPadding, the first element of the array will specify the padding to be applied to domain minimum, and the second element will specify padding the be applied to domain maximum.

note: The x value supplied to the domainPadding prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will corresponds to the y axis.

examples:

  • domainPadding={20}
  • domainPadding={{x: [20, 0]}}

note Values supplied for domainPadding will be coerced so that padding a domain will never result in charts including an additional quadrant. For example, if an original domain included only positive values, domainPadding will be coerced so that the resulted padded domain will not include negative values.

<VictoryChart
   domainPadding={{ x: 100 }}
>
  <VictoryBar data={sampleData}/>
</VictoryChart>

eventKey

type: string || integer || array[string] || function

The eventKey prop is used to assign eventKeys to data. This prop operates identically to the x and y data accessor props. By default, the eventKey of each datum will be equal to its index in the data array. This prop is not commonly used.

See the Events Guide for more information on defining events and using event keys.

events

type: array[object]

The events prop takes an array of event objects. Event objects are composed of identifying properties, and eventHandlers.

Identifying properties include:

  • childName: the name of the component the event should be attached to. When events are specified in VictorySharedEvents or on a component that renders several Victory components as children (i.e. VictoryChart, VictoryGroup, VictoryStack), it is necessary to specify which child events should apply to. The given childName should match the name prop of a child component. This identifier can be given as a string, an array of strings, or as "all".

  • target: the type of element the event should be attached to. Valid targets for most Victory components will be "parent", "data", and "labels". Events with the "parent" target will be attached to the top level svg. Events with "data" and "labels" targets will be attached to dataComponent and labelComponent elements respectively. Some components, like VictoryAxis use non-standard targets like "grid". Refer to individual API docs for additional caveats.

  • eventKey: the specific element to be targeted. Events may be attached to specific elements by eventKey. By default, eventKey corresponds to the index in the data array (or tickValues array) corresponding to a rendered element. This value may be given as a single string or number, an array of strings or numbers, or as "all". It is not typically necessary to specify an individual eventKey for attaching events. When no eventKey is given, events will be attached to all elements that match a given childName and target. Some components like VictoryArea and VictoryLine render only a single element for an entire series of data. For these, the eventKey should be "all".

eventHandlers should be given as an object whose keys are standard event names (e.g., onClick) and whose values are event callbacks. Callbacks are called with the props of the individual element that triggered the event. For example, when a click event occurs on a bar, the props object supplied to the onClick handler will include props specific to that individual bar, such as datum, index, style, etc. Return values from event handler callbacks may be used to mutate other elements.

Event returns should be given as an array of objects composed of identifying properties for specifying the element(s) to be modified and a mutation function. Identifying properties include childName, target, and eventKey. When these values are not provided, the identifiers of the element that triggered the event will be used, including the specific eventKey. The mutation function will be called with the calculated props for each element that should be modified (e.g., a bar label), and the object returned from the mutation function will override the props of that element via object assignment.

<VictoryChart
  events={[{
    childName: "all",
    target: "data",
    eventHandlers: {
      onClick: () => {
        return [
          {
            childName: "area-2",
            target: "data",
            mutation: (props) => ({ style: Object.assign({}, props.style, { fill: "gold" }) })
          }, {
            childName: "area-3",
            target: "data",
            mutation: (props) => ({ style: Object.assign({}, props.style, { fill: "orange" }) })
          }, {
            childName: "area-4",
            target: "data",
            mutation: (props) => ({ style: Object.assign({}, props.style, { fill: "red" }) })
          }
        ];
      }
    }
  }]}
>
  <VictoryStack>
    <VictoryArea name="area-1" data={sampleData}/>
    <VictoryArea name="area-2" data={sampleData}/>
    <VictoryArea name="area-3" data={sampleData}/>
    <VictoryArea name="area-4" data={sampleData}/>
  </VictoryStack>
</VictoryChart>

externalEventMutations

type: array[object]

Occasionally is it necessary to trigger events in Victory's event system from some external element such as a button or a form field. Use the externalEventMutation prop to specify a set of mutations to apply to a given chart. The externalEventMutations should be given in the following form:

externalEventMutations: PropTypes.arrayOf(
  PropTypes.shape({
    callback: PropTypes.func,
    childName: PropTypes.oneOfType([PropTypes.string, PropTypes.array]),
    eventKey: PropTypes.oneOfType([
      PropTypes.array,
      CustomPropTypes.allOfType([CustomPropTypes.integer, CustomPropTypes.nonNegative]),
      PropTypes.string
    ]),
    mutation: PropTypes.func,
    target: PropTypes.oneOfType([PropTypes.string, PropTypes.array])
  })
);

The target, eventKey, and childName (when applicable) must always be specified. The mutation function will be called with the current props of the element specified by the target, eventKey and childName provided. The mutation function should return a mutation object for that element. The callback prop should be used to clear the externalEventMutations prop once the mutation has been applied. Clearing externalEventMutations is crucial for charts that animate.

function App() {
  const [state, setState] = React.useState({
    externalMutations: undefined
  });

  function removeMutation() {
    setState({
      externalMutations: undefined
    });
  }

  function clearClicks() {
    setState({
      externalMutations: [
        {
          childName: "Bar-1",
          target: ["data"],
          eventKey: "all",
          mutation: () => ({ style: undefined }),
          callback: removeMutation
        }
      ]
    });
  }

  const buttonStyle = {
    backgroundColor: "black",
    color: "white",
    padding: "10px",
    marginTop: "10px"
  };

  return (
    <div>
      <button
        onClick={clearClicks}
        style={buttonStyle}
      >
        Reset
      </button>
      <VictoryChart domain={{ x: [0, 5 ] }}
        externalEventMutations={state.externalMutations}
        events={[
          {
            target: "data",
            childName: "Bar-1",
            eventHandlers: {
              onClick: () => ({
                target: "data",
                mutation: () => ({ style: { fill: "orange" } })
              })
            }
          }
        ]}
      >
        <VictoryBar name="Bar-1"
          style={{ data: { fill: "grey"} }}
          labels={() => "click me!"}
          data={[
            { x: 1, y: 2 },
            { x: 2, y: 4 },
            { x: 3, y: 1 },
            { x: 4, y: 5 }
          ]}
        />
      </VictoryChart>
    </div>
  )
}

render(<App/>);

Note External mutations are applied to the same state object that is used to control events in Victory, so depending on the order in which they are triggered, external event mutations may override mutations caused by internal Victory events or vice versa.

groupComponent

type: element

The groupComponent prop takes a component instance which will be used to create group elements for use within container elements. For most components, this prop defaults to a <g> tag. Continuous data components like VictoryLine and VictoryArea use VictoryClipContainer a component which renders a <g> tag with a clipPath def. This allows continuous data components to transition smoothly when new data points enter and exit. VictoryClipContainer may also be used with components like VictoryScatter to prevent data from overflowing the chart area.

<VictoryChart>
  <VictoryScatter
    data={sampleData}
    size={20}
    groupComponent={<VictoryClipContainer/>}
  />
</VictoryChart>

height

type: number

The height prop determines the height of the containing <svg>. By default Victory components render responsive containers with the viewBox attribute set to viewBox="0, 0, width, height" and width="100%", height="auto". In responsive containers, the width and height props affect the aspect ratio of the rendered component, while the absolute width and height are determined by the container. To render a static container, pass responsive={false} to the containerComponent like containerComponent={<VictoryContainer responsive={false}/>}, or set standalone={false} and render the resulting <g> tag in your own <svg> container. When a component is nested within VictoryChart, VictoryStack, or VictoryGroup setting the height prop on the child component will have no effect.

default (provided by default theme): height={300}

<div>
  <VictoryBar height={500} />
  <VictoryBar height={500}
    containerComponent={<VictoryContainer responsive={false}/>}
  />
</div>

horizontal

type: boolean

The horizontal prop determines whether data will be plotted horizontally. When this prop is set to true, the independent variable will be plotted on the y axis and the dependent variable will be plotted on the x axis.

<VictoryChart
  theme={VictoryTheme.material}
  domainPadding={{ x: 10 }}
>
  <VictoryBar horizontal
    style={{
      data: { fill: "#c43a31" }
    }}
    data={sampleData}
  />
</VictoryChart>

labelComponent

type: element

The labelComponent prop takes a component instance which will be used to render labels for the component. The new element created from the passed labelComponent will be supplied with the following properties: x, y, index, data, datum, verticalAnchor, textAnchor, angle, style, text, and events. Any of these props may be overridden by passing in props to the supplied component, or modified or ignored within the custom component itself. If labelComponent is omitted, a new VictoryLabel will be created with the props described above. VictoryTooltip is commonly used as a labelComponent

note: labelComponent is not currently supported for VictoryBoxPlot as it has its own label components (maxLabelComponent, medianLabelComponent, minLabelComponent, q1LabelComponent & q3LabelComponent). See VictoryBoxPlot for more info.

examples:

  • labelComponent={<VictoryLabel dy={20}/>}
  • labelComponent={<VictoryTooltip/>}

default: <VictoryLabel/>

<VictoryBar
  data={sampleData}
  labels={({ datum }) => datum.y}
  style={{ labels: { fill: "white" } }}
  labelComponent={<VictoryLabel dy={30} />}
/>

labels

type: array || function

The labels prop defines the labels that will appear above each point. This prop should be given as an array or as a function. When given as a function, labels will be called with a single argument: an object containing all the props supplied to the label component. A full list of props that will be passed to VictoryLabel is given here.

examples:

  • labels={["first", "second", "third"]}
  • labels={({ datum }) => datum.y}
<VictoryBar
  data={sampleData}
  labels={({ datum }) => `y: ${datum.y}`}
/>

maxDomain

type: number || { x: number, y: number }

The maxDomain prop defines a maximum domain value for a chart. This prop is useful in situations where the maximum domain of a chart is static, while the minimum value depends on data or other variable information. If the domain prop is set in addition to maximumDomain, domain will be used.

note: The x value supplied to the maxDomain prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will corresponds to the y axis.

examples:

  • maxDomain={0}
  • maxDomain={{ y: 0 }}
<VictoryChart maxDomain={{ y: 0 }}>
  <VictoryLine
    data={[
      { x: 1, y: -2 },
      { x: 2, y: 1 },
      { x: 3, y: -1 },
      { x: 4, y: -3 }
    ]}
  />
</VictoryChart>

minDomain

type: number || { x: number, y: number }

The minDomain prop defines a minimum domain value for a chart. This prop is useful in situations where the minimum domain of a chart is static, while the maximum value depends on data or other variable information. If the domain prop is set in addition to minimumDomain, domain will be used.

note: The x value supplied to the minDomain prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will corresponds to the y axis.

examples:

  • minDomain={0}
  • minDomain={{ y: 0 }}
<VictoryChart minDomain={{ y: 0 }}>
  <VictoryLine
    data={[
      { x: 1, y: 2 },
      { x: 2, y: -1 },
      { x: 3, y: 1 },
      { x: 4, y: 3 }
    ]}
  />
</VictoryChart>

name

type: string

The name prop is used to reference a component instance when defining shared events.

example: name="series-1"

origin

type: { x: number, y: number }

The origin prop is used to define the center point in svg coordinates for polar charts. All children within a polar chart must share the same origin, so setting this prop on children nested within VictoryChart, VictoryStack, or VictoryGroup will have no effect. When this prop is not set, it will be calculated based on the width, height and padding of the chart. This prop is usually not set manually.

padding

type: number || { top: number, bottom: number, left: number, right: number }

The padding prop specifies the amount of padding in number of pixels between the edge of the chart and any rendered child components. This prop can be given as a number or as an object with padding specified for top, bottom, left and right. As with width and height, the absolute padding will depend on whether the component is rendered in a responsive container. When a component is nested within VictoryChart, VictoryStack, or VictoryGroup setting padding on the child component will have no effect.

examples:

  • padding={{top: 20, bottom: 60}}
  • padding={40}

default (provided by default theme): padding={50}

<VictoryChart
  padding={{ top: 40, bottom: 80, left: 40, right: 80 }}
>
<VictoryLine data={sampleData} />
</VictoryChart>

polar

type: boolean

The boolean polar prop specifies whether a chart should be plotted on a polar coordinate system. All components in a given chart must share the same coordinate system, so setting this prop on children nested within VictoryChart, VictoryStack, or VictoryGroup will have no effect.

<div>
<VictoryBar polar
  data={sampleData}
  labels={(d) => d.x.toFixed(0)}
  width={400} height={400}
  domain={{ x: [0, 7], y: [0, 7] }}
  style={{ data: { fill: "#c43a31", stroke: "black", strokeWidth: 2 } }}
/>
<VictoryBar
  data={sampleData}
  labels={(d) => d.x.toFixed(0)}
  width={400} height={400}
  domain={{ x: [0, 7], y: [0, 7] }}
  style={{ data: { fill: "#c43a31", stroke: "black", strokeWidth: 2 } }}
/>
</div>

range

type: array[low, high] || { x: [low, high], y: [low, high] }

The range prop describes the dimensions over which data may be plotted. For cartesian coordinate systems, this corresponds to minimum and maximum svg coordinates in the x and y dimension. In polar coordinate systems this corresponds to a range of angles and radii. When this value is not given it will be calculated from the width, height, and padding, or from the startAngle and endAngle in the case of polar charts. All components in a given chart must share the same range, so setting this prop on children nested within VictoryChart, VictoryStack, or VictoryGroup will have no effect. This prop is usually not set manually.

examples:

  • Cartesian: range={{ x: [50, 250], y: [50, 250] }}
  • Polar: range={{ x: [0, 360], y: [0, 250] }}

samples

type: number

The samples prop specifies how many individual points to plot when plotting y as a function of x. The samples prop is ignored if data is supplied in props.

default: samples={50}

<VictoryChart>
  <VictoryLine
    samples={25}
    y={(d) => Math.sin(5 * Math.PI * d.x)}
  />
  <VictoryLine
    samples={100}
    style={{ data: { stroke: "red" } }}
    y={(d) => Math.cos(5 * Math.PI * d.x)}
  />
</VictoryChart>

scale

type: scale || { x: scale, y: scale }

The scale prop determines which scales your chart should use. In this case, "scale" refers to the d3 scale that is used inside Victory to determine the placement of data, ticks, and labels. A scale type can be either a string ("linear", "time", "log", "sqrt"), or a custom d3 scale function. This prop can be passed as a single scale, or as an object with scales specified for x and y. For "time" scales, data points should be Date objects or getTime() instances.

This prop should be set at the top-level of the chart in order to avoid being overwritten by the default value. In other words, unless an individual chart component is being used as a standalone component (without a VictoryChart wrapper), this prop should be added to the VictoryChart component.

note: The x value supplied to the scale prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will correspond to the y axis.

default: scale="linear"

examples:

  • scale="time"
  • scale={{x: "linear", y: "log"}}
<VictoryChart
  scale={{ x: "linear", y: "log" }}
>
  <VictoryLine
    style={{ data: { stroke: "red" } }}
    domain={{ x: [0, 5] }}
    y={(d) => Math.pow(1 - d.x, 10)}
  />
</VictoryChart>

In this example, a discontinous scale plugin from d3fc can be used to create a custom scale function to skip weekends along the x-axis.

note: The data set has already been filtered to only include weekdays.

function App() {
  const data = [
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 1), y: 8 },
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 2), y: 10 },
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 3), y: 7 },
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 4), y: 4 },
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 7), y: 6 },
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 8), y: 3 },
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 9), y: 7 },
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 10), y: 9 },
    { x: new Date(2021, 5, 11), y: 6 }
  ];

  const discontinuousScale = scaleDiscontinuous(
    d3Scale.scaleTime()
  ).discontinuityProvider(discontinuitySkipWeekends());

  return (
    <VictoryChart scale={{ x: discontinuousScale }}>
      <VictoryArea
        data={data}
        style={{data: { fill: 'lightblue', stroke: 'teal' }}}
      />
    </VictoryChart>
  );
}

render(<App />);

sharedEvents

The sharedEvents prop is used to coordinate events between Victory components using VictorySharedEvents. This prop should not be set manually.

singleQuadrantDomainPadding

type: boolean || { x: boolean, y: boolean }

By default domainPadding is coerced to existing quadrants. This means that if a given domain only includes positive values, no amount of padding applied by domainPadding will result in a domain with negative values. This is the desired behavior in most cases. For users that need to apply padding without regard to quadrant, the singleQuadrantDomainPadding prop may be used. This prop may be given as a boolean or an object with boolean values specified for "x" and/or "y". When this prop is false (or false for a given dimension), padding will be applied without regard to quadrant. If this prop is not specified, domainPadding will be coerced to existing quadrants.

note: The x value supplied to the singleQuadrantDomainPadding prop refers to the independent variable, and the y value refers to the dependent variable. This may cause confusion in horizontal charts, as the independent variable will corresponds to the y axis.

examples:

  • singleQuadrantDomainPadding={false}
  • singleQuadrantDomainPadding={{ x: false }}
<VictoryChart
  singleQuadrantDomainPadding={{ x: false }}
  domainPadding={100}
>
  <VictoryBar data={sampleData}/>
  <VictoryAxis crossAxis={false}/>
</VictoryChart>

sortKey

type: string || integer || array[string] || function

Use the sortKey prop to indicate how data should be sorted. This prop is given directly to the lodash sortBy function to be executed on the final dataset.

This prop can be provided in a variety of formats

string: specify which property in a data object to sort the data array by

sortKey = "x";

function: use a function to determine how to sort data elements in an array

sortKey={(datum) => datum.xValue + datum.error}

array index: specify which index of an array should be used to sort data when data is given as an array of arrays

sortKey={0}

array: specify multiple properties to sort by

sortKey={["age", "height"]}
<VictoryLine
  data={range(0, 2 * Math.PI, 0.01).map((t) => ({ t }))}
  sortKey="t"
  x={(d) => Math.sin(3 * d.t + (2 * Math.PI))}
  y={(d) => Math.sin(2 * d.t)}
/>

sortOrder

type: "ascending" || "descending"

The sortOrder prop specifies whether sorted data should be returned in ascending or descending order.

default: sortOrder="ascending"

standalone

type: boolean

The standalone props specifies whether the component should be rendered in an independent <svg> element or in a <g> tag. This prop defaults to true, and renders an svg, however, wrapper components like VictoryChart, VictoryStack, and VictoryGroup force children to use standalone={false}.

default: standalone={true}

<svg width={300} height={300}>
  <circle cx={150} cy={150} r={150} fill="#c43a31"/>
  <VictoryArea
    standalone={false}
    width={300} height={300} padding={0}
    data={sampleData}
  />
</svg>

style

type: object

The style prop defines the style of the component. The style prop should be given as an object with styles defined for data, labels and parent. Any valid svg styles are supported, but width, height, and padding should be specified via props as they determine relative layout for components in VictoryChart.

style={{
  data: { fill: "tomato", opacity: 0.7 },
  labels: { fontSize: 12 },
  parent: { border: "1px solid #ccc" }
}}

Any style attribute may also be defined as a function of the props for whatever element it applies to. For example:

style={{
  data: { fill: ({ datum }) => datum.y > 0 ? "green" : "red" },
  labels: { fontSize: ({ text }) => text.length > 10 ? 8 : 12 },
  parent: { border: "1px solid #ccc" }
}}

note The style prop used by VictoryAxis has a different format than the standard style prop.

note When a component is rendered as a child of another Victory component, or within a custom <svg> element with standalone={false} parent styles will be applied to the enclosing <g> tag. Many styles that can be applied to a parent <svg> will not be expressed when applied to a <g>.

note custom angle and verticalAnchor properties may be included in labels styles.

default (provided by default theme): See grayscale theme for more detail

<VictoryScatter
  style={{
    parent: {
      border: "1px solid #ccc"
    },
    data: {
      fill: "#c43a31", fillOpacity: 0.6, stroke: "#c43a31", strokeWidth: 3
    },
    labels: {
      fontSize: 15, fill: "#c43a31", padding: 15
    }
  }}
  size={9}
  data={sampleData}
  labels={({ datum }) => datum.x}
/>

theme

type: object

The theme prop specifies a theme to use for determining styles and layout properties for a component. Any styles or props defined in theme may be overwritten by props specified on the component instance. By default, components use a grayscale theme.

See the Themes Guide for information about creating custom themes.

default: theme={VictoryTheme.grayscale}

theme={VictoryTheme.material}

width

type: number

The width prop determines the width of the containing <svg>. By default Victory components render responsive containers with the viewBox attribute set to viewBox="0, 0, width, height" and width="100%", height="auto". In responsive containers, the width and height props affect the aspect ratio of the rendered component, while the absolute width and height are determined by the container. To render a static container, pass responsive={false} to the containerComponent like containerComponent={<VictoryContainer responsive={false}/>}, or set standalone={false} and render the resulting <g> tag in your own <svg> container. When a component is nested within VictoryChart, VictoryStack, or VictoryGroup setting width prop on the child component will have no effect.

default (provided by default theme): width={450}

<div>
  <VictoryBar width={1200}/>
  <VictoryBar width={1200}
    containerComponent={<VictoryContainer responsive={false}/>}
  />
</div>

x

type: string || integer || array[string] || function

Use the x data accessor prop to determine how the component defines data in the x dimension. This prop may be given in a variety of formats:

string: specify which property in an array of data objects should be used as the x value

x = "month";

function: use a function to translate each element in a data array into an x value

x={(datum) => datum.xValue + datum.error}

array index: specify which index of an array should be used as an x value when data is given as an array of arrays

x={0}

path string or path array: specify which property in an array of nested data objects should be used as an x value

x="employees.name"`, `x={["employees", "name"]}

See the Data Accessors Guide for more detail on formatting and processing data.

y

type: string || integer || array[string] || function

Use y data accessor prop to determine how the component defines data in the y dimension. This prop may be given in a variety of formats:

string: specify which property in an array of data objects should be used as the y value

y = "profit";

function: use a function to translate each element in a data array into a y value

y={(datum) => Math.sin(2 * Math.PI * datum.x)}

array index: specify which index of an array should be used as a y value when data is given as an array of arrays

y={1}

path string or path array: specify which property in an array of nested data objects should be used as a y value

y="employees.salary"`, `y={["employees", "salary"]}

See the Data Accessors Guide for more detail on formatting and processing data.

y0

type: string || integer || array[string] || function

Use y0 data accessor prop to determine how the component defines the baseline y0 data. This prop is useful for defining custom baselines for components like VictoryBar or VictoryArea. This prop may be given in a variety of formats.

string: specify which property in an array of data objects should be used as the y0 value

y0 = "last_quarter_profit";

function: use a function to translate each element in a data array into a y0 value

y0={() => 10}

array index: specify which index of an array should be used as a y0 value when data is given as an array of arrays

y0={1}

path string or path array: specify which property in an array of nested data objects should be used as a y0 value

y0="employees.salary"`, `y={["employees", "salary"]}

See the Data Accessors Guide for more detail on formatting and processing data.