I would like to display a temperature curve over time. I have now read a file, which is CSV-similar, that let me know the time and the temperature indicated. Now I want to u
Several problems are evident:
You never add anything to lines
; at a minimum, you'll need something like this:
lines.add(line);
Instead of ChartFactory.createXYLineChart()
, consider creating a time series:
ChartFactory.createTimeSeriesChart(…)
The XYDataset
returned by createDataset()
should be a TimeSeriesCollection
to which you add a TimeSeries.
In createDataset()
, iterate though lines
, parse the data fields, and add the values to the TimeSeries
.
The time values given are most closely modeled by LocalTime
, but TimeSeries
expects to add()
coordinates defined by a RegularTimePeriod
and a double
; see Legacy Date-Time Code concerning the conversion shown below.
Note that TimeSeries
throws SeriesException
for duplicate domain values; as a result, only three of the four lines int eh sample input air charted.
Instead of replacing the factory supplied XYLineAndShapeRenderer
, get a reference to it for later modification.
Alter the chart's size using one of the approaches shown here.
Avoid extending top-level containers line ApplicationFrame
.
Construct and manipulate Swing GUI objects only on the event dispatch thread.
Use a try-with-resources statement to ensure that each resource is closed at the end of the statement.
As your actual data contains ISO 8601 dates, ZonedDateTime.parse() can be used directly; use setDateFormatOverride() to format the date axis labels; the example below specifies a UTC time zone in ISO 8601 format for easy comparison; comment out the call to setDateFormatOverride()
to see the times in your local time zone.
import java.awt.Color;
import java.awt.EventQueue;
import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.FileReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.text.SimpleDateFormat;
import java.time.ZonedDateTime;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.TimeZone;
import org.jfree.chart.ChartFactory;
import org.jfree.chart.ChartPanel;
import org.jfree.chart.JFreeChart;
import org.jfree.chart.axis.DateAxis;
import org.jfree.chart.plot.XYPlot;
import org.jfree.chart.renderer.xy.XYLineAndShapeRenderer;
import org.jfree.data.general.SeriesException;
import org.jfree.data.time.Second;
import org.jfree.data.time.TimeSeries;
import org.jfree.data.time.TimeSeriesCollection;
import org.jfree.data.xy.XYDataset;
import org.jfree.ui.ApplicationFrame;
/** @see https://stackoverflow.com/a/45173688/230513 */
public class CSVTest {
public static void main(String[] args) {
EventQueue.invokeLater(() -> {
ApplicationFrame frame = new ApplicationFrame("CSVTest");
CSVTest test = new CSVTest();
frame.add(test.createChart("Temperature profile"));
frame.pack();
frame.setLocationRelativeTo(null);;
frame.setVisible(true);
});
}
private ChartPanel createChart(String chartTitle) {
JFreeChart chart = ChartFactory.createTimeSeriesChart(chartTitle,
"Time", "Temperature", createDataset(), true, true, false);
ChartPanel chartPanel = new ChartPanel(chart);
XYPlot plot = chart.getXYPlot();
plot.setBackgroundPaint(Color.WHITE);
XYLineAndShapeRenderer r = (XYLineAndShapeRenderer) plot.getRenderer();
r.setBaseShapesVisible(true);
DateAxis axis = (DateAxis) plot.getDomainAxis();
SimpleDateFormat df = new SimpleDateFormat("HH:mm:ssX");
df.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC"));
axis.setDateFormatOverride(df);
return chartPanel;
}
private XYDataset createDataset() {
TimeSeries series = new TimeSeries("Temperature");
TimeSeriesCollection dataset = new TimeSeriesCollection(series);
try (FileReader fr = new FileReader("temp.csv");
BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(fr)) {
String line;
while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) {
String[] s = line.split(",");
ZonedDateTime zdt = ZonedDateTime.parse(s[0]);
Second second = new Second(Date.from(zdt.toInstant()));
series.add(second, Double.valueOf(s[2]));
}
} catch (IOException | SeriesException e) {
System.err.println("Error: " + e);
}
return dataset;
}
}