Stacked area chart
Applies to: ✅ Microsoft Fabric ✅ Azure Data Explorer ✅ Azure Monitor ✅ Microsoft Sentinel
The stacked area chart visual shows a continuous relationship. This visual is similar to the Area chart, but shows the area under each element of a series. The first column of the query should be numeric and is used as the x-axis. Other numeric columns are the y-axes. Unlike line charts, area charts also visually represent volume. Area charts are ideal for indicating the change among different datasets.
Note
This visualization can only be used in the context of the render operator.
Syntax
T |
render
stackedareachart
[with
(
propertyName =
propertyValue [,
...])
]
Learn more about syntax conventions.
Supported parameters
Name | Type | Required | Description |
---|---|---|---|
T | string |
✔️ | Input table name. |
propertyName, propertyValue | string |
A comma-separated list of key-value property pairs. See supported properties. |
Supported properties
All properties are optional.
PropertyName | PropertyValue |
---|---|
accumulate |
Whether the value of each measure gets added to all its predecessors. (true or false ) |
legend |
Whether to display a legend or not (visible or hidden ). |
series |
Comma-delimited list of columns whose combined per-record values define the series that record belongs to. |
ymin |
The minimum value to be displayed on Y-axis. |
ymax |
The maximum value to be displayed on Y-axis. |
title |
The title of the visualization (of type string ). |
xaxis |
How to scale the x-axis (linear or log ). |
xcolumn |
Which column in the result is used for the x-axis. |
xtitle |
The title of the x-axis (of type string ). |
yaxis |
How to scale the y-axis (linear or log ). |
ycolumns |
Comma-delimited list of columns that consist of the values provided per value of the x column. |
ytitle |
The title of the y-axis (of type string ). |
Example
nyc_taxi
| summarize count() by passenger_count, bin(pickup_datetime, 2d)
| render stackedareachart with (xcolumn=pickup_datetime, series=passenger_count)