The Perl Toolchain Summit needs more sponsors. If your company depends on Perl, please support this very important event.

NAME

Chart::Plotly::Trace::Histogram::Cumulative - This attribute is one of the possible options for the trace histogram.

VERSION

version 0.030

SYNOPSIS

 use HTML::Show;
 use Chart::Plotly;
 use Chart::Plotly::Trace::Histogram;
 my $histogram = Chart::Plotly::Trace::Histogram->new( x => [ map { int( 10 * rand() ) } ( 1 .. 500 ) ] );
 
 HTML::Show::show( Chart::Plotly::render_full_html( data => [$histogram] ) );

DESCRIPTION

This attribute is part of the possible options for the trace histogram.

This file has been autogenerated from the official plotly.js source.

If you like Plotly, please support them: https://plot.ly/ Open source announcement: https://plot.ly/javascript/open-source-announcement/

Full reference: https://plot.ly/javascript/reference/#histogram

DISCLAIMER

This is an unofficial Plotly Perl module. Currently I'm not affiliated in any way with Plotly. But I think plotly.js is a great library and I want to use it with perl.

METHODS

TO_JSON

Serialize the trace to JSON. This method should be called only by JSON serializer.

ATTRIBUTES

  • currentbin

    Only applies if cumulative is enabled. Sets whether the current bin is included, excluded, or has half of its value included in the current cumulative value. *include* is the default for compatibility with various other tools, however it introduces a half-bin bias to the results. *exclude* makes the opposite half-bin bias, and *half* removes it.

  • direction

    Only applies if cumulative is enabled. If *increasing* (default) we sum all prior bins, so the result increases from left to right. If *decreasing* we sum later bins so the result decreases from left to right.

  • enabled

    If true, display the cumulative distribution by summing the binned values. Use the `direction` and `centralbin` attributes to tune the accumulation method. Note: in this mode, the *density* `histnorm` settings behave the same as their equivalents without *density*: ** and *density* both rise to the number of data points, and *probability* and *probability density* both rise to the number of sample points.

AUTHOR

Pablo Rodríguez González <pablo.rodriguez.gonzalez@gmail.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is Copyright (c) 2019 by Pablo Rodríguez González.

This is free software, licensed under:

  The MIT (X11) License