3👍
You override the entire dataset, if you instead of doing that only change the data of that dataset it will shrink/expand the segments of the data.
Example:
const options = {
type: 'pie',
data: {
labels: ["Red", "Blue", "Yellow", "Green", "Purple", "Orange"],
datasets: [{
label: '# of Votes',
data: [12, 19, 3, 5, 2, 3],
backgroundColor: ["Red", "Blue", "Yellow", "Green", "Purple", "Orange"],
},
{
label: '# of Points',
data: [7, 11, 5, 8, 3, 7],
backgroundColor: ["Red", "Blue", "Yellow", "Green", "Purple", "Orange"],
}
]
},
options: {}
}
const ctx = document.getElementById('chartJSContainer').getContext('2d');
const chart = new Chart(ctx, options);
document.getElementById('update').addEventListener('click', () => {
chart.data.datasets[0].data = [10, 5, 12, 6, 8, 2];
chart.update();
})
<body>
<canvas id="chartJSContainer" width="600" height="400"></canvas>
<button id="update">
update data
</button>
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/Chart.js/3.4.1/chart.js"></script>
</body>
Source:stackexchange.com