Indicators in Python
How to make gauge charts in Python with Plotly.
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Plotly is a free and open-source graphing library for Python. We recommend you read our Getting Started guide for the latest installation or upgrade instructions, then move on to our Plotly Fundamentals tutorials or dive straight in to some Basic Charts tutorials.
Overview¶
In this tutorial we introduce a new trace named "Indicator". The purpose of "indicator" is to visualize a single value specified by the "value" attribute. Three distinct visual elements are available to represent that value: number, delta and gauge. Any combination of them can be specified via the "mode" attribute. Top-level attributes are:
- value: the value to visualize
- mode: which visual elements to draw
- align: how to align number and delta (left, center, right)
- domain: the extent of the figure
Then we can configure the 3 different visual elements via their respective container:
- number is simply a representation of the number in text. It has attributes:
- valueformat: to format the number
- prefix: a string before the number
- suffix: a string after the number
- font.(family|size): to control the font
- reference: the number to compare the value with
- relative: whether that difference is absolute or relative
- valueformat: to format the delta
- (increasing|decreasing).color: color to be used for positive or decreasing delta
- (increasing|decreasing).symbol: symbol displayed on the left of the delta
- font.(family|size): to control the font
- position: position relative to `number` (either top, left, bottom, right)
- prefix: a string to appear before the delta
- suffix: a string to appear after the delta
title
with 'text' attribute which is a string, and 'align' which can be set to left, center, and right.
There are two gauge types: angular and bullet. Here is a combination of both shapes (angular, bullet), and different modes (gauge, delta, and value):
import plotly.graph_objects as go
fig = go.Figure()
fig.add_trace(go.Indicator(
value = 200,
delta = {'reference': 160},
gauge = {
'axis': {'visible': False}},
domain = {'row': 0, 'column': 0}))
fig.add_trace(go.Indicator(
value = 120,
gauge = {
'shape': "bullet",
'axis' : {'visible': False}},
domain = {'x': [0.05, 0.5], 'y': [0.15, 0.35]}))
fig.add_trace(go.Indicator(
mode = "number+delta",
value = 300,
domain = {'row': 0, 'column': 1}))
fig.add_trace(go.Indicator(
mode = "delta",
value = 40,
domain = {'row': 1, 'column': 1}))
fig.update_layout(
grid = {'rows': 2, 'columns': 2, 'pattern': "independent"},
template = {'data' : {'indicator': [{
'title': {'text': "Speed"},
'mode' : "number+delta+gauge",
'delta' : {'reference': 90}}]
}})
A Single Angular Gauge Chart¶
import plotly.graph_objects as go
fig = go.Figure(go.Indicator(
mode = "gauge+number",
value = 450,
title = {'text': "Speed"},
domain = {'x': [0, 1], 'y': [0, 1]}
))
fig.show()
Bullet Gauge¶
The equivalent of above "angular gauge":
import plotly.graph_objects as go
fig = go.Figure(go.Indicator(
mode = "number+gauge+delta",
gauge = {'shape': "bullet"},
delta = {'reference': 300},
value = 220,
domain = {'x': [0.1, 1], 'y': [0.2, 0.9]},
title = {'text': "Avg order size"}))
fig.show()
Showing Information above Your Chart¶
Another interesting feature is that indicator trace sits above the other traces (even the 3d ones). This way, it can be easily used as an overlay as demonstrated below
import plotly.graph_objects as go
fig = go.Figure(go.Indicator(
mode = "number+delta",
value = 492,
delta = {"reference": 512, "valueformat": ".0f"},
title = {"text": "Users online"},
domain = {'y': [0, 1], 'x': [0.25, 0.75]}))
fig.add_trace(go.Scatter(
y = [325, 324, 405, 400, 424, 404, 417, 432, 419, 394, 410, 426, 413, 419, 404, 408, 401, 377, 368, 361, 356, 359, 375, 397, 394, 418, 437, 450, 430, 442, 424, 443, 420, 418, 423, 423, 426, 440, 437, 436, 447, 460, 478, 472, 450, 456, 436, 418, 429, 412, 429, 442, 464, 447, 434, 457, 474, 480, 499, 497, 480, 502, 512, 492]))
fig.update_layout(xaxis = {'range': [0, 62]})
fig.show()
Data Cards / Big Numbers¶
Data card helps to display more contextual information about the data. Sometimes one number is all you want to see in a report, such as total sales, annual revenue, etc. This example shows how to visualize these big numbers:
import plotly.graph_objects as go
fig = go.Figure(go.Indicator(
mode = "number+delta",
value = 400,
number = {'prefix': "$"},
delta = {'position': "top", 'reference': 320},
domain = {'x': [0, 1], 'y': [0, 1]}))
fig.update_layout(paper_bgcolor = "lightgray")
fig.show()
It's possible to display several numbers¶
import plotly.graph_objects as go
fig = go.Figure()
fig.add_trace(go.Indicator(
mode = "number+delta",
value = 200,
domain = {'x': [0, 0.5], 'y': [0, 0.5]},
delta = {'reference': 400, 'relative': True, 'position' : "top"}))
fig.add_trace(go.Indicator(
mode = "number+delta",
value = 350,
delta = {'reference': 400, 'relative': True},
domain = {'x': [0, 0.5], 'y': [0.5, 1]}))
fig.add_trace(go.Indicator(
mode = "number+delta",
value = 450,
title = {"text": "Accounts<br><span style='font-size:0.8em;color:gray'>Subtitle</span><br><span style='font-size:0.8em;color:gray'>Subsubtitle</span>"},
delta = {'reference': 400, 'relative': True},
domain = {'x': [0.6, 1], 'y': [0, 1]}))
fig.show()
Adding a Prefix and Suffix¶
On both a number
and a delta
, you can add a string to appear before the value using prefix
. You can add a string to appear after the value using suffix
. In the following example, we add '$' as a prefix
and 'm' as suffix
for both the number
and delta
.
Note: suffix
and prefix
on delta
are new in 5.10
import plotly.graph_objects as go
fig = go.Figure(go.Indicator(
mode = "number+delta",
value = 492,
number = {"prefix": "$", "suffix": "m"},
delta = {"reference": 512, "valueformat": ".0f", "prefix": "$", "suffix": "m"},
title = {"text": "Profit"},
domain = {'y': [0, 1], 'x': [0.25, 0.75]}))
fig.add_trace(go.Scatter(
y = [325, 324, 405, 400, 424, 404, 417, 432, 419, 394, 410, 426, 413, 419, 404, 408, 401, 377, 368, 361, 356, 359, 375, 397, 394, 418, 437, 450, 430, 442, 424, 443, 420, 418, 423, 423, 426, 440, 437, 436, 447, 460, 478, 472, 450, 456, 436, 418, 429, 412, 429, 442, 464, 447, 434, 457, 474, 480, 499, 497, 480, 502, 512, 492]))
fig.update_layout(xaxis = {'range': [0, 62]})
fig.show()
Reference¶
See https://plotly.com/python/reference/indicator/ for more information and chart attribute options!
What About Dash?¶
Dash is an open-source framework for building analytical applications, with no Javascript required, and it is tightly integrated with the Plotly graphing library.
Learn about how to install Dash at https://dash.plot.ly/installation.
Everywhere in this page that you see fig.show()
, you can display the same figure in a Dash application by passing it to the figure
argument of the Graph
component from the built-in dash_core_components
package like this:
import plotly.graph_objects as go # or plotly.express as px
fig = go.Figure() # or any Plotly Express function e.g. px.bar(...)
# fig.add_trace( ... )
# fig.update_layout( ... )
from dash import Dash, dcc, html
app = Dash()
app.layout = html.Div([
dcc.Graph(figure=fig)
])
app.run_server(debug=True, use_reloader=False) # Turn off reloader if inside Jupyter