DataPointCollection.AddY Method
Definition
Important
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Adds a DataPoint object to the end of the collection, with the specified Y-value(s).
Overloads
AddY(Double) |
Adds a DataPoint object to the end of the collection, with the specified Y-value. |
AddY(Object[]) |
Adds a DataPoint object to the end of the collection, with the specified Y-value(s). |
AddY(Double)
Adds a DataPoint object to the end of the collection, with the specified Y-value.
public:
int AddY(double yValue);
public int AddY (double yValue);
member this.AddY : double -> int
Public Function AddY (yValue As Double) As Integer
Parameters
- yValue
- Double
The Y-value of the data point.
Returns
An integer
that represents the zero-based index where the item was inserted into the data point collection.
Remarks
This method adds one DataPoint object to the DataPointCollection; the data point is always added to the end of the collection.
Use the method definition that allows for an array of Y-values if your data points require more than one Y-value.
If your data points need an X-value - that is, if you are creating scatter plots - use one of the AddXY
methods instead.
Applies to
AddY(Object[])
Adds a DataPoint object to the end of the collection, with the specified Y-value(s).
public:
int AddY(... cli::array <System::Object ^> ^ yValue);
public int AddY (params object[] yValue);
member this.AddY : obj[] -> int
Public Function AddY (ParamArray yValue As Object()) As Integer
Parameters
- yValue
- Object[]
A comma-separated list of Y-value(s) of the DataPoint object added to the collection.
Returns
An integer
that represents the location in zero-based index where the item was inserted into the collection.
Remarks
This method adds one DataPoint object to the DataPointCollection; the data point is always added to the end of the collection.
You must provide at least one (1) Y-value, otherwise an exception will be thrown. This method also checks the ChartType property of the DataPoint object this data belongs to; if too many Y-values are specified, an exception will be thrown.
The X-value will always be set to zero (0), resulting in non-scatter plots. If you want the data points to use an X-value, call one of the AddXY
methods instead.
In order for DateTime formatting to have an effect, a value must be a DateTime object.
The following .NET types can be used for the object type parameters:
- String
- DateTime
- Double
- Decimal
- Single
- Int32
- UInt32
- Int64
- UInt64