Clickmap and mouseover support


Version 2.33 Jun'06


Manual page for Clickmap_and_mouseover_support(PL)

Clickmaps and mouseover labels

Clickmaps (clickable imagemaps) allow web browser users to click on a region in an image which behaves as a hyperlink to a new web page. Mouseover labels, also refered to as "tooltips" or "pop-up text bubbles", allow web browser users to hover the mouse pointer over an image region and see a popup text bubble that gives additional information, which can be a powerful, clutter-avoiding annotation technique. Some live examples are shown below. Ploticus supports these capabilities for various types of plots and graphs, annotations, and arbitrary rectangular regions. There are three different strategies for achieving clickable regions and/or mouseover labels:

  • Client side image maps - best method for PNG/JPEG/GIF; allows mouseover labels; described below.
  • Server side image maps - less flexible method for PNG/JPEG/GIF when legacy browser support is required; no mouseover labels; described below.
  • SVG methods - described on the ploticus SVG page


Typical method

Here's a typical method for generating a PNG image with client-side image map:

1. If you want clickable regions, use the clickmapurl attribute in your plotting proc (or prefab) to specify a URL. Data field contents are represented in the URL constructs like this: @@2. Example: in proc bars, you specify clickmapurl: http://abc.com/cgi-bin/showall?id=@@2 ... the user can click on any bar and go to the URL, where id will be based on data field 2.

2. If you want mouseover labels, use the clickmaplabel attribute in your plotting proc (or prefab) to specify a label. Data field contents are represented in the label using constructs like this: @@3. Example: in proc bars, you specify clickmaplabel: @@4 ... the user can hover the mouse pointer over any bar and see the popup text bubble label showing the contents of data field 4.

3. Generate HTML like this:

   <map name="map1">
   [ Execute ploticus here.. use the -csmap command line option and
     generate an output file called eg. mypic.png ..
     It will write <area> tags to its standard output. ]
   </map>
   <img src="mypic.png" usemap="#map1">


To generate a server-side image map instead, use step 1 above, then execute ploticus, using the -map and perhaps the -mapfile command line options. Then incorporate your mapfile into your HTML using a construct like this:
  <a href="mypic.map"> <img src="mypic.png" ismap > </a>



Examples

Here's a gallery example that uses a client-side imagemap to implement mouseover text labels (move your mouse over the bars). A number of live script examples that you can try are provided below.

Here's a prefab example: The following prefab command generates a bar graph with both clickmap and mouseover label support. Click-thru URLs would be built using the contents of data field 2, and mouseover labels will be displayed using the contents of data field 3.

  pl -prefab bars  data=myfile.dat  delim=tab  y=1 \
   clickmapurl="http://abc.com/cgi-bin/showcase?caseid=@2" \
   clickmaplabel="@3"  -csmap 
Here's an SVG mouseover example. (see the ploticus SVG page for more info).


Special syntax for deploying new windows

Sometimes it is desirable to deploy a new window when the user clicks on an image. Here's an example of how to do this in ploticus. clickmapurl: [target=new]http://abc.com/cgi-bin/show?id=@@4     Ploticus will pass the HTML target=new attribute through to the HTML area tags. You can use any standard target name. This works with client-side maps and SVG. New in 2.33


Troubleshooting

A command line option (-csmap or -map) must be used to turn on mapping.. the presence of a clickmapurl or clickmaplabel attribute in a script or prefab does not by itself turn on mapping.

The -csmapdemo command line option may be used (in place of -csmap) to show the mapped regions outlined in green. Also, when -csmapdemo is used along with -png, -jpg of -gif, a complete HTML chunk linking the output image with the map will be written to standard output, as an aid to development.

Note that if two generated mapped regions overlap, they are stacked in the order generated (the last generated is on "top").

There is an upper limitation of 500 clickmap zones / 500 mouseover labels per job. Max length of a clickmap url or mouseover label (after variable evaluation) is 250 characters.

URLs are encoded properly in 2.33+


How it works with different graphical elements

Pie graphs, bar graphs, and scatterplots

Use clickmapurl to specify a URL template. Use clickmaplabel to specify a popup text label. The template may contain data field references prefaced by two at-signs (@@). For example, script writers could specify something like this for proc bars:
	clickmapurl: http://abc.com/mycgi?id=@@3
	clickmaplabel: @@4
which would generate a URL for each bar using the value in data field 3 for each. Mouseover text label will be the contents of data field 4. See EXAMPLES above where this same thing is done with a prefab.


Annotations and arbitrary rectangles

In scripts, use proc annotate or proc rect attribute clickmapurl to specify a URL and/or mouseover label explicitly. For example:
	clickmapurl: http://abc.com/docs/aboutpets.html
	clickmaplabel: A complete description of how to care for your new pet

Legend entries

In scripts embed a URL into the legendlabel attribute (or if you are using proc legendentry the label attribute). Use this format: url:url label
The combined length of the url and the label should not exceed 255 characters.
Mouseover labels are not supported for legend entries.
See this example: clickmap_leg


Covering the entire plotting area

In scripts, use proc areadef attribute clickmapurl to specify a URL. XVAL and YVAL do not apply. Use clickmaplabel to specify a mouseover label.


Regular interval regions (or a grid) within the plotting area

In scripts, use proc areadef attribute clickmapurl to specify a URL template. The template should contain special symbols @@XVAL and/or @@YVAL. For example:
	clickmapurl: http://abc.com/mycgi?x=@@XVAL&y=@@YVAL
Then use proc axis attribute clickmap for either the X axis, the Y axis, or both.
  • For a clickmap responding to different values in X, the above URL template should contain @@XVAL, and set proc xaxis attribute clickmap: grid.
  • For a clickmap responding to different values in Y, the above URL template should contain @@YVAL, and set proc yaxis attribute clickmap: grid.
  • For a clickmap responding to different values in X and Y, the above URL template should contain both @@XVAL and @@YVAL, and set proc xaxis attribute clickmap: xygrid and proc yaxis attribute clickmap: xygrid.
The mapped regions will be centered around stubs. Stub values will be substituted into the URL template as XVAL and YVAL. These stub values will use the default format (not necessarily the displayed stub format) for the particular scale unit but this can be controlled using proc axis clickmapvalformat attribute. By default the regions will stop at the plotting area boundary, but they can be extended (to encompass stubs for example) using proc axis clickmapextent attribute.
If you need higher (or lower) granularity than what your stubs provide, you can invoke an additional, invisible X axis using the desired granularity like this:
	#proc xaxis
	stubs: inc <whatever>
	clickmap: grid
	axisline: no
 	tics: no
	stubomit: *
Mouseover text labels are not directly supported for plotting area grid, but a workaround for doing this is to use proc bars with the constantlength attribute to draw invisible bars (use white for the color) that extend to cover the entire plotting area. Here's a gallery example that illustrates.


Setting a default URL for the entire image

In scripts, use proc page attribute clickmapdefault to specify a default URL that will be invoked if the mouse click is not in a defined region.


Notes

Embedded spaces and newlines that turn up within URLs will be converted to underscores.

Grid mapping may not be used with more than one plotting area per image.


Live examples to try

Most of the following script examples have been run with -csmapdemo to add the green overlay showing where clickable regions are. Try clicking on these images.. they are mapped to a live CGI program that will echo the passed parameters.


clickmap_pie

Click on pie slice labels.






Click here to see script source. An example where proc annotate was used to create a simple E-R diagram for a database. Entity bubbles support text annotation that appears when the mouse hovers over them, and click-thru to actual database table documentation. Try hovering the mouse pointer over an entity bubble, and then click on the bubble.



Click here to see another gallery example that uses a client-side imagemap with mouseover text labels (but no URLs)





clickmap_leg

Click on legend entries.


clickmap_area2

Mapped plotting area grid. Numeric in X and Y. Click on plotting area. To try the SVG equivalent click here.


clickmap_area3

Same as above, but with finer granularity. This is done by executing an invisible X axis and an invisible Y axis for the clickmap (in addition to the visible axes) using the automatically determined stub increment, divided by 4.


snpmap1

Mapped plotting area grid. Numeric in X; categories in Y. Note that the mapped grid (Y) is influenced by stubslide.


colorgrid

Data points are mapped. Click on any data point.


clickmap_area

Mapped plotting area grid. Months in X, numeric in Y. Note that month format is controlled using proc axis clickmapvalformat.


clickmap_log

Mapped plotting area grid in Y. Log example. Click on plotting area.


clickmap_time2

Mapped timeline bars.


clickmap_mouse

Mapped plotting area grid. Categories in X. Note that the X stubs are (mostly) included in the mapped regions. This is done using the proc xaxis clickmapextent attribute.


clickmap_hit

Mapped plotting area grid. Datetimes in X. The datetimes are mapped in 6 hour increments, even though stubs appear every 24 hours. This is done by executing an invisible X axis for the clickmap, using 6 hour increments.


data display engine  
Copyright Steve Grubb


Ploticus is hosted at http://ploticus.sourceforge.net
SourceForge Logo


Markup created by unroff 1.0,    June 02, 2006.