Basically, you need to adapt the tickOffsets()
function of the Axis.X
, Axis.Y
and Axis.Time
classes in Rickshaw.
tickSize
will not help you with that as - like @Old Pro stated correctly - it indicates the size of the bold tick lines in pixels. It has nothing to do with spacing.
For Time-based Axes
My solution essentially consists of replacing the standard tickOffsets()
function in those files
this.tickOffsets = function() {
var domain = this.graph.x.domain();
var unit = this.fixedTimeUnit || this.appropriateTimeUnit();
var count = Math.ceil((domain[1] - domain[0]) / unit.seconds);
var runningTick = domain[0];
var offsets = [];
for (var i = 0; i < count; i++) {
var tickValue = time.ceil(runningTick, unit);
runningTick = tickValue + unit.seconds / 2;
offsets.push( { value: tickValue, unit: unit } );
}
return offsets;
};
by a custom routine. This is gonna do the trick:
this.tickOffsets = function() {
var domain = this.graph.x.domain();
var unit = this.fixedTimeUnit || this.appropriateTimeUnit();
var tickSpacing = args.tickSpacing || unit.seconds;
var count = Math.ceil((domain[1] - domain[0]) / tickSpacing);
var runningTick = domain[0];
var offsets = [];
for (var i = 0; i < count; i++) {
var tickValue = time.ceil(runningTick, unit);
runningTick = tickValue + tickSpacing;
offsets.push( { value: tickValue, unit: unit } );
}
return offsets;
};
With that in place, you can write something like
var time = new Rickshaw.Fixtures.Time();
var timeUnit = time.unit('year');
var x_axis = new Rickshaw.Graph.Axis.ExtendedTime(
{
graph: graph,
tickSpacing: 60*60*24*365*13, // 13 years
timeUnit: timeUnit
} );
to have ticks spaced out evenly at every 13 years.
For Value-based Axes
For value-based Axes, you would need to extend the render()
function to include a facility that "manually" sets the ticks for the axis. I did it like this:
this.render = function() {
if (this.graph.height !== this._renderHeight) this.setSize({ auto: true });
var axis = d3.svg.axis().scale(this.graph.y).orient(this.orientation);
if (this.tickSpacing) {
var tickValues = [];
var min = Math.ceil(axis.scale().domain()[0]/this.tickSpacing);
var max = Math.floor(axis.scale().domain()[1]/this.tickSpacing);
for (i = min * this.tickSpacing; i < max; i += 1) {
console.log(i);
tickValues.push(i * this.tickSpacing);
}
axis.tickValues(tickValues);
}
axis.tickFormat( args.tickFormat || function(y) { return y } );
if (this.orientation == 'left') {
var berth = this.height * berthRate;
var transform = 'translate(' + this.width + ', ' + berth + ')';
}
if (this.element) {
this.vis.selectAll('*').remove();
}
this.vis
.append("svg:g")
.attr("class", ["y_ticks", this.ticksTreatment].join(" "))
.attr("transform", transform)
.call(axis.ticks(this.ticks).tickSubdivide(0).tickSize(this.tickSize));
var gridSize = (this.orientation == 'right' ? 1 : -1) * this.graph.width;
this.graph.vis
.append("svg:g")
.attr("class", "y_grid")
.call(axis.ticks(this.ticks).tickSubdivide(0).tickSize(gridSize));
this._renderHeight = this.graph.height;
};
The important part here are the statements in the if (this.tickSpacing)
clause. They compute ticks given by the tickSpacing
variable in the config array, and assign them to the axis in the axis.tickValues(tickValues)
statement. Note that this.tickValues
is assigned in the this.tickSpacing = args.tickSpacing
statement in the initialize()
function, not stated above.
Try it yourself
Have a look at this jsfiddle, where the complete code is available. This will certainly give you some pointers. If you want, you can create your own jsfiddle with your values and tell me if you need anything else.