How to create Excel volume high low close chart in C#, VB.NET?
This article explains how to create a volume-high-low-close chart in Excel using the Syncfusion® Excel (XlsIO) library.
What is a volume-high-low-close chart?
A volume-high-low-close stock market chart is a type of bar chart or graph used primarily to show changes in the value of tradable assets such as stocks over a given period of time.
Volume-High-Low-Close Chart
To create a volume-high-low-close chart in Excel using XlsIO, you need to do the following steps.
Steps to create a volume-high-low-close chart
Step 1: Initialize chart
Create a chart object by calling the worksheet.Charts.Add method.
C#
// Create the chart IChartShape chart = worksheet.Charts.Add();
Step 2: Assign data and specify the chart type
Set a range of data from the worksheet to the chart’s DataRange property and specify the chart type to ExcelChartType.Stock_VolumeHighLowClose enum value.
C#
// Set region of Chart data chart.DataRange = worksheet["A1:F5"]; // Set chart type to Stock_VolumeHighLowClose chart.ChartType = ExcelChartType.Stock_VolumeHighLowClose;
For creating a stock volume-high-low-close chart, the series count must be 4. The data range should be set before selecting the chart type.
Step 3: Apply basic chart elements
Add the basic elements like chart title, data labels and legend.
- ChartTitle of the chart object.
- Set DataLabels via DefaultDataPoint.
- Set TRUE to the chart’s HasLegend property, to show the legend.
C#
// Apply chart elements // Set Chart Title chart.ChartTitle = "Volume-High-Low-Close Chart"; // Set Legend chart.HasLegend = true; chart.Legend.Position = ExcelLegendPosition.Bottom; // Set DataLabels IChartSerie serie1 = chart.Series[1]; serie1.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsValue = true; serie1.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsSeriesName = true; serie1.SerieFormat.MarkerStyle = ExcelChartMarkerType.Circle; serie1.SerieFormat.MarkerBackgroundColorIndex = ExcelKnownColors.LightGreen;
Applicable properties to modify volume series in volume-high-low-close chart
Below is the list of other common properties applicable to modify volume series (chart.Series[0]) in volume-high-low-close-chart.
- GapWidth (value should be between 0 and 500)
- Overlap (value should be between -100 and 100)
Properties used to modify the markers in the volume-high-low-close chart
Below is the list of properties that are used to change the markers in volume-high-low-close chart.
- MarkerBackgroundColor (or) MarkerBackgroundColorIndex
- MarkerForegroundColor (or) MarkerForegroungColorIndex
- MarkerSize
- MarkerStyle
- IsAutoMarkerNote:
Marker properties are applicable only for high (chart.Series[1]), low (chart.Series[2]) and close (chart.Series[3]) series.
To know more about creating charts with various settings using Syncfusion® Excel (XlsIO) library, please refer to the documentation.
The following C#/ VB.NET complete code snippet shows the creation of a volume-high-low-close chart using XlsIO.
C#
using Syncfusion.XlsIO; using System.Reflection; using System.IO; namespace ChartSample { class Program { static void Main(string[] args) { using (ExcelEngine excelEngine = new ExcelEngine()) { IApplication application = excelEngine.Excel; application.DefaultVersion = ExcelVersion.Excel2016; // Open existing workbook with data entered Assembly assembly = typeof(Program).GetTypeInfo().Assembly; Stream fileStream = assembly.GetManifestResourceStream("ChartSample.InputTemplate.xlsx"); IWorkbook workbook = application.Workbooks.Open(fileStream); IWorksheet worksheet = workbook.Worksheets[0]; // Initialize chart and assign data IChartShape chart = worksheet.Charts.Add(); chart.DataRange = worksheet["A1:F5"]; chart.ChartType = ExcelChartType.Stock_VolumeHighLowClose; // Apply chart elements // Set Chart Title chart.ChartTitle = "Volume-High-Low-Close Chart"; // Set Legend chart.HasLegend = true; chart.Legend.Position = ExcelLegendPosition.Bottom; // Set DataLabels IChartSerie serie1 = chart.Series[1]; IChartSerie serie2 = chart.Series[2]; IChartSerie serie3 = chart.Series[3]; serie1.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsValue = true; serie1.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsSeriesName = true; serie1.SerieFormat.MarkerStyle = ExcelChartMarkerType.Circle; serie1.SerieFormat.MarkerBackgroundColorIndex = ExcelKnownColors.LightGreen; serie2.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsValue = true; serie2.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsSeriesName = true; serie2.SerieFormat.MarkerStyle = ExcelChartMarkerType.Circle; serie2.SerieFormat.MarkerBackgroundColorIndex = ExcelKnownColors.Red; serie3.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsValue = true; serie3.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsSeriesName = true; serie3.SerieFormat.MarkerStyle = ExcelChartMarkerType.Circle; serie3.SerieFormat.MarkerBackgroundColorIndex = ExcelKnownColors.Light_yellow; // Positioning the chart in the worksheet chart.TopRow = 8; chart.LeftColumn = 1; chart.BottomRow = 23; chart.RightColumn = 8; // Saving the workbook Stream stream = File.Create("Output.xlsx"); workbook.SaveAs(stream); } } } }
VB.NET
Imports Syncfusion.XlsIO Imports System.Reflection Imports System.IO Namespace ChartSample Class Program Public Shared Sub Main(ByVal args As String()) Using excelEngine As ExcelEngine = New ExcelEngine() Dim application As IApplication = excelEngine.Excel application.DefaultVersion = ExcelVersion.Excel2016 'Open existing workbook with data entered Dim assembly As Assembly = GetType(Program).GetTypeInfo().Assembly Dim fileStream As Stream = assembly.GetManifestResourceStream("ChartSample.InputTemplate.xlsx") Dim workbook As IWorkbook = application.Workbooks.Open(fileStream) Dim worksheet As IWorksheet = workbook.Worksheets(0) 'Initialize chart and assign data Dim chart As IChartShape = worksheet.Charts.Add chart.DataRange = worksheet("A1:F5") chart.ChartType = ExcelChartType.Stock_VolumeHighLowClose 'Apply chart elements 'Set Chart Title chart.ChartTitle = "Volume-High-Low-Close Chart" 'Set Legend chart.HasLegend = True chart.Legend.Position = ExcelLegendPosition.Bottom 'Set data labels Dim serie1 As IChartSerie = chart.Series(1) Dim serie2 As IChartSerie = chart.Series(2) Dim serie3 As IChartSerie = chart.Series(3) serie1.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsValue = True serie1.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsSeriesName = True serie1.SerieFormat.MarkerStyle = ExcelChartMarkerType.Circle serie1.SerieFormat.MarkerBackgroundColorIndex = ExcelKnownColors.LightGreen serie2.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsValue = True serie2.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsSeriesName = True serie2.SerieFormat.MarkerStyle = ExcelChartMarkerType.Circle serie2.SerieFormat.MarkerBackgroundColorIndex = ExcelKnownColors.Red serie3.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsValue = True serie3.DataPoints.DefaultDataPoint.DataLabels.IsSeriesName = True serie3.SerieFormat.MarkerStyle = ExcelChartMarkerType.Circle serie3.SerieFormat.MarkerBackgroundColorIndex = ExcelKnownColors.Light_yellow 'Positioning chart in the worksheet chart.TopRow = 8 chart.LeftColumn = 1 chart.BottomRow = 23 chart.RightColumn = 8 'Saving the workbook Dim stream As Stream = File.Create("Output.xlsx") workbook.SaveAs(stream) End Using End Sub End Class End Namespace
Take a moment to peruse the documentation, where you can find basic worksheet data manipulation options along with features like Conditional Formatting, worksheet calculations through Formulas, adding Charts in worksheet or workbook, organizing and analyzing data through Tables and Pivot Tables, appending multiple records to worksheet using Template Markers, and most importantly PDF and Image conversions with code examples.
Refer here to explore the rich set of Syncfusion Essential® XlsIO features.