gaugeStyle
The GaugeStyle type defines how a gauge is visually represented. By selecting a particular style, you control whether the gauge appears as a ring, a bar, or uses markers to indicate the current value. Some styles only apply on specific platforms (notably watchOS), while others are more broadly available.
Overview
A Gauge component visually represents a value within a specified range. For example, you might use it to show a battery level, download progress, or temperature reading. By combining a Gauge with a chosen GaugeStyle, you can tailor the gauge’s appearance to match your app’s design language or functional requirements.
Key points:
- Choose a style that best suits the data you’re representing—rings for circular contexts, bars for linear contexts.
- Some styles show a marker at the current value; others show a filled segment or partial capacity.
- Certain styles are only available on watchOS, as noted below.
Available Styles
-
automatic:
Relies on the system’s default style for the current platform and context. This is a good starting point if you don’t have a strong preference. -
accessoryCircular:
Shows an open ring with a marker that points to the current value along the ring’s circumference. Great for showing levels or percentages in a compact, circular form. -
accessoryCircularCapacity:
Similar toaccessoryCircularbut shows a closed ring partially filled in up to the current value. This works well to indicate capacity levels, such as a storage meter. -
circular(Only available on watchOS):
LikeaccessoryCircular, this displays an open ring with a marker. Useful for watchOS complications or similar small form factor displays. -
linearCapacity:
Displays a horizontal bar that fills from the leading edge to the trailing edge as the value increases. Ideal for progress bars, battery meters, or memory usage indicators. -
accessoryLinear:
A linear gauge that shows a marker along a bar, indicating the exact point of the current value rather than a filled segment. -
accessoryLinearCapacity:
Combines aspects oflinearCapacitywith theaccessoryLinearstyle. It shows a filled bar segment that grows with the value, suitable for showing capacity or progress out of a whole. -
linear(Only available on watchOS):
Similar toaccessoryLinearbut watchOS-specific. It shows a marker along a bar for the current value.
Example Usage
In this example, the gauge shows a partially filled circular ring indicating that the battery level is at 70%.
Switching to a linear capacity style:
This would show a horizontal bar filled from left to right up to 70% of its length.
If you prefer a style that shows a marker instead of a fill, you could do:
This style displays an open ring with a marker pointing to the current value (70%) rather than a filled segment.
When to Use Each Style
-
circularandaccessoryCircularstyles:
Ideal for data that you intuitively represent in a circular format, such as a timer, speedometer-like reading, or capacity shown as a ring. -
linearandaccessoryLinearstyles:
Best for data that’s inherently linear, like progress bars, completion percentages, or levels that are typically read left to right. -
Capacitystyles:
Perfect for scenarios where you want a filled segment to indicate how “full” or “complete” something is, such as battery life, storage space used, or loading progress. -
automatic:
Let the system decide and adapt style based on context. Good as a default choice if you’re unsure.
Summary
By setting the gaugeStyle on a Gauge, you have full control over the visual representation of your data. Whether you want a circular ring, a linear bar, a simple marker, or a filled capacity indicator, GaugeStyle provides flexible options to present information in a way that feels both intuitive and aesthetically pleasing.
