Blazor Area Chart is like line chart to represent time-dependent data and to show the trends at equal intervals, but it fills the area below the line. Uses numeric, category, datetime, or logarithmic axis to plot data.
Allows you to plot multiple series in a single chart to compare different data sets. Enabling legend and tooltip gives more information about the individual series.
Marks data points with built-in shapes such as circles, rectangles, ellipses, vertical lines, horizontal lines, diamonds, triangles, pluses, crosses, and pentagons. In addition to these shapes, use images to make the point more attractive.
Data labels display information about data points. Add a template to display data labels with HTML elements such as images, DIV, and spans for more informative data labels. You can rotate a data label by its given angle.
Use multiple axes to plot different data sets that widely vary from one other.
Enable zooming and panning support when dealing with large amount of data to visualize the data point in any region.
Handle the missed data elegantly with empty points support.
The Blazor Area Chart can be transposed vertically to view the data in a different perspective.
Customize the color and border of the Blazor Area Chart using built-in APIs.
Easily get started with Blazor Area Chart using a few simple lines of C# code, as demonstrated below. Also explore our Blazor Area Chart Example that shows you how to render and configure the chart.
@using Syncfusion.Blazor.Charts
<SfChart>
<ChartPrimaryXAxis ValueType="Syncfusion.Blazor.Charts.ValueType.Category"/>
<ChartSeriesCollection>
<ChartSeries DataSource="@MedalDetails" XName="X" YName="Y" Type="ChartSeriesType.Area">
</ChartSeries>
</ChartSeriesCollection>
</SfChart>
@code
{
public class ChartData
{
public string X { get; set; }
public double Y { get; set; }
}
public List<ChartData> MedalDetails = new List<ChartData>
{
new ChartData { X= "South Korea", Y= 39.4 },
new ChartData { X= "India", Y= 61.3 },
new ChartData { X= "Pakistan", Y= 20.4 },
new ChartData { X= "Germany", Y= 65.1 },
new ChartData { X= "Australia", Y= 15.8 }
};
}