Create a Gauge in React Native using FusionCharts
Overview
FusionCharts is a JavaScript charting library that enables you to create interactive charts, gauges, maps and dashboards in JavaScript. We have built a simple and lightweight React Native component which provides bindings for FusionCharts. The react-native-fusioncharts component allows you to easily add rich and interactive charts to any React Native project.
In this page, we'll see how to install FusionCharts and render a gauge using the react-native-fusioncharts component.
Installation
Install FusionCharts and the react-native-fusioncharts component using any of the following methods:
react-native-fusioncharts component via npm follow the steps below:react-native-fusioncharts module
    $ npm install react-native-fusioncharts --save
fusioncharts JS files
    $ npm install fusioncharts --save
react-native-fusioncharts component for Android, follow the steps given below:- Create a folder named 
assetsunderandroid/app/src/maindirectory if it doesn't exist. - Copy 
FusionChartslibrary files (node_modules/fusioncharts folder) in theassetsfolder. - Create a 
fusioncharts.htmlfile inassetsfolder. Include the FusionCharts library files infusioncharts.htmlfile using <script> tag. 
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>FusionCharts</title>
<meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0, user-scalable=no" />
    <style type="text/css">
        body,
        html {
            margin: 0;
            padding: 0;
            overflow: hidden;
            font-size: 13px;
        }
        #chart-container {
            width: 100%;
            height: 100%;
            top: 0;
            left: 0;
            right: 0;
            bottom: 0;
            position: absolute;
            user-select: none;
            -webkit-user-select: none;
            overflow: hidden;
        }
        #loading-text {
            position: absolute;
            top: 50%;
            left: 50%;
            transform: translate(-50%, -50%);
            -webkit-transform: translate(-50%, -50%);
            user-select: none;
            -webkit-user-select: none;
        }
    </style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="chart-container">
<div id="loading-text">
Chart is loading...
</div>
</div>
    <script type='text/javascript'>
        "use strict";
        (function() {
            var a = Promise.resolve(),
                b = {},
                c = {};
            (function d() {
                var f = function() {
                    function g() {
                        return Math.floor(65536 * (1 + Math.random())).toString(16).substring(1)
                    }
                    return g() + g() + "-" + g() + "-" + g() + "-" + g() + "-" + g() + g() + g()
                };
                window.webViewBridge = {
                    send: function send(g, h, i, j) {
                        i = i || function() {}, j = j || function() {};
                        var k = {
                                targetFunc: g,
                                data: h || {},
                                msgId: f()
                            },
                            l = JSON.stringify(k);
                        a = a.then(function() {
                            return new Promise(function(m, n) {
                                b[k.msgId] = {
                                    resolve: m,
                                    reject: n
                                }, c[k.msgId] = {
                                    onsuccess: i,
                                    onerror: j
                                }, window.postMessage(l)
                            })
                        }).catch(function() {})
                    }
                }, window.document.addEventListener("message", function(g) {
                    var h;
                    try {
                        h = JSON.parse(g.data)
                    } catch (i) {
                        return
                    }
                    b[h.msgId] && (b[h.msgId].resolve(), delete b[h.msgId]), h.args && c[h.msgId] && (h.isSuccessfull ? c[h.msgId].onsuccess.apply(null, h.args) : c[h.msgId].onerror.apply(null, h.args), delete c[h.msgId])
                })
            })()
        })();
    </script>
    <!-- Include the required FusionCharts modules -->
    <script type='text/javascript' src="fusioncharts/fusioncharts.js"></script>
    <script type="text/javascript" src="fusioncharts/fusioncharts.widgets.js"></script>
    <script type='text/javascript' src="fusioncharts/themes/fusioncharts.theme.fusion.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
        libraryPath property to the FusionCharts component.
<FusionCharts 
......
libraryPath={{ uri: 'file:///android_asset/fusioncharts.html' }}/>
        
        package.json file to bundle your assets when you want to generate a signed APK.
"scripts": {
    ......
    "clean:build:android": "rm -rf android/app/build",
    "prod:android": "npm run clean:build:android  && react-native bundle --platform android --dev false --entry-file index.js --bundle-output android/app/src/main/assets/index.android.bundle --assets-dest android/app/src/main/res"
},
        
        
$ npm run prod:android
        
    
react-native-fusioncharts component via npm follow the steps below:react-native-fusioncharts module
    $ npm install react-native-fusioncharts --save
fusioncharts JS files
    $ npm install fusioncharts --save
react-native-fusioncharts component for iOS, follow the steps given below:- Create a folder named 
assetsin your projectrootif it doesn't exist. - Copy 
FusionChartslibrary files in theassetsfolder. - Create a 
fusioncharts-tpl.htmlfile inassetsfolder. Include the FusionCharts library files infusioncharts.htmlfile using <script> tag. 
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<!-- Include the required FusionCharts modules -->
<script type='text/javascript' src="fusioncharts/fusioncharts.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="fusioncharts/fusioncharts.widgets.js"></script>
<script type='text/javascript' src="fusioncharts/themes/fusioncharts.theme.fusion.js"></script>
</head>
<body></body>
</html>
        build"assets script in Application's package.json file
"scripts": {
    ......
    "build:assets": "fc-build-assets --fc-template ./assets/fusioncharts-tpl.html --fc-library ./assets/fusioncharts"
},
        
        --fc-library ./assets/fusioncharts is required when you copy FusionCharts library files in your assets folder.Note:
fc-build-assets is a utility binary provided by react-native-fusioncharts to package the FusionCharts modules(.js files) referenced in template(.html file) as needed by the React Native iOS build process.
$ npm run build:assets
        
    
That completes the installation of FusionCharts and the react-native-fusioncharts component.
Create your first gauge
Gauges are powerful tools that can showcase information using a radial or linear scale to display data.
To start with, we'll build a simple angular gauge showcasing Nordstrom's Customer Satisfaction Score as shown below.
FusionCharts Suite has 95+ chart types for you to explore. Find the complete list of chart types here.
The angular gauge is shown below:
Chart data
The thresholds for the above sample is shown in the table below:
| Range | Color | Hex Code | 
|---|---|---|
| 0-50 | Red | #F2726F | 
| 50-75 | Yellow | #FFC533 | 
| 75-100 | Green | #62B58F | 
So, any score less than 50 is bad and is red. Any score between 50 and 75 is average and is yellow. Any score above 75 means good and are green.
FusionCharts accepts data in JSON format. Following code is the JSON representation of the above table with the required attributes to render the above chart.
{
  // Chart Configuration
  "chart": {
    "caption": "Nordstrom's Customer Satisfaction Score for 2017",
    "lowerLimit": "0",
    "upperLimit": "100",
    "showValue": "1",
    "numberSuffix": "%",
    "theme": "fusion",
    "showToolTip": "0"
  },
  // Chart Data
  "colorRange": {
    "color": [
      {
        "minValue": "0",
        "maxValue": "50",
        "code": "#F2726F"
      },
      {
        "minValue": "50",
        "maxValue": "75",
        "code": "#FFC533"
      },
      {
        "minValue": "75",
        "maxValue": "100",
        "code": "#62B58F"
      }
    ]
  },
  "dials": {
    "dial": [
      {
        "value": "81"
      }
    ]
  }
}
In the above JSON:
Create the
chartobject to define the elements of the gauge.Create the
colorRangeobject to set the color associated with the specific range of values.Specify
minValueandmaxValuewithin thecolorarray under thecolorRangeobject.Set the
codeattribute to specify the hex color of respective ranges.Create the
dialsobject to represent the customer satisfaction score.Create the
dialobject underdialsobject to set the value of customer satisfaction score.
The chart object and the respective arrays contain a set of key-value pairs known as attributes. These attributes are used to set the functional and cosmetic properties of the gauge.
Now that you have the data in JSON format, let's see how to render the chart.
Render the chart
To render the chart, follow the steps below:
Include react.
Include
react-native-fusionchartscomponent.Define the chart configuration in a JSON.
- Set the gauge type as 
angulargauge. Each chart type is represented with a unique chart alias. For Angular Gauge, the alias isangulargauge. Find the complete list of gauge types with their respective alias here. - Set the width and height (in pixels).
 - Set the 
dataFormatas json. - Embed the json data as the value of the 
dataSource. 
- Set the gauge type as 
 Specify the location of
fusioncharts.htmlfor Android and iOS.Add
styleto the container of the chart.
The
JavaScriptcode to create a chart in Android and iOS is same.
Copy the following code to app.js file.
import React, { Component } from "react";
import { Platform, StyleSheet, Text, View } from "react-native";
import FusionCharts from "react-native-fusioncharts";
export default class DrillDown extends Component {
  constructor(props) {
    super(props);
    this.apiCaller = null;
    this.state = {
      type: "angulargauge",
      width: "450",
      height: "250",
      dataFormat: "json",
      dataSource: {
        chart: {
          caption: "Nordstrom's Customer Satisfaction Score for 2017",
          lowerLimit: "0",
          upperLimit: "100",
          showValue: "1",
          numberSuffix: "%",
          theme: "fusion",
          showToolTip: "0"
        },
        colorRange: {
          color: [
            {
              minValue: "0",
              maxValue: "50",
              code: "#F2726F"
            },
            {
              minValue: "50",
              maxValue: "75",
              code: "#FFC533"
            },
            {
              minValue: "75",
              maxValue: "100",
              code: "#62B58F"
            }
          ]
        },
        dials: {
          dial: [
            {
              value: "81"
            }
          ]
        }
      }
    };
    this.libraryPath = Platform.select({
      // Specify fusioncharts.html file location
      android: { uri: "file:///android_asset/fusioncharts.html" },
      ios: require("./assets/fusioncharts.html")
    });
  }
  render() {
    return (
      <View style={styles.container}>
        <Text style={styles.header}>A Simple Gauge</Text>
        <View style={styles.chartContainer}>
          <FusionCharts
            type={this.state.type}
            width={this.state.width}
            height={this.state.height}
            dataFormat={this.state.dataFormat}
            dataSource={this.state.dataSource}
            libraryPath={this.libraryPath}
          />
        </View>
      </View>
    );
  }
}
const styles = StyleSheet.create({
  container: {
    flex: 1,
    padding: 10
  },
  header: {
    fontWeight: "bold",
    fontSize: 20,
    textAlign: "center",
    paddingBottom: 10
  },
  chartContainer: {
    height: 400,
    borderColor: "#000",
    borderWidth: 1
  }
});
That's it! Your first gauge using react-native-fusioncharts is ready.