echarts-for-react
Pipe
echarts-for-react | Pipe | |
---|---|---|
6 | 6 | |
4,364 | 1,854 | |
- | - | |
3.1 | 5.6 | |
3 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
TypeScript | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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echarts-for-react
- Lets-Plot: An open-source plotting library by JetBrains
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A Rounded Solution to Image Handling on the OpenSauced Dashboard
Before adopting nivo and Cloudinary, we initially used Apache E-charts (specifically a React wrapper called echarts-for-react) to handle image processing and loading. This approach proved extremely slow, and it was quite the process in figuring out a better solution while we had a real-time constraint.
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maybe the better way to echarts
Make echarts come in handy for React. Based on echarts-for-react
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Using Apache ECharts with React and TypeScript
What about echarts-for-react?
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Top 30 Open Source And Paid React Charts + Examples
Rating: 3.1 stars on GitHub
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React and D3.js
Although I haven't used Semiotic but Echarts [1] for the last 4 years, I agree with the sentiment. D3 is regularly on top of HN and I always wonder if its popularity is due to people not knowing there are easier alternatives or it's because they really need a library as low-level as D3 for plotting their data.
[1] https://github.com/apache/echarts + https://github.com/hustcc/echarts-for-react
been using echarts for the last 3 years
Pipe
- Pipe: A Python library to use infix notation in Python
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Lets-Plot: An open-source plotting library by JetBrains
The Apache Beam SDK for Python is another example. It has its own pipe expressions (|, >>, |>, etc.).
[1] https://github.com/JulienPalard/Pipe
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Are we looking at the same python?
For example, you can't do something like array.map(). You have to do map(array), which is really unergonomic in many cases. That's why there are things like Pipe for Python, or pipe-like operators in other languages.
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This Week in Python
Pipe – A Python library to use infix notation in Python
- A Python library to use infix notation in Python
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Easy, readable data processing in functional manner using pypely
Yes it works with MPP engines as the package is not used for orchestration purposes. It is meant to encourage a coding paradigm: functional programming. The benefit of the package is that it provides functions that make it easy to apply functional programming to data processing tasks. Similar projects with a different focus are: fluentpy and Pipe
What are some alternatives?
DHTMLX Gantt - GPL version of Javascript Gantt Chart
fluent - Python wrapper for stdlib (and other) objects to give them a fluent interface.
visx - 🐯 visx | visualization components
plotly.rs - Plotly for Rust
recharts - Redefined chart library built with React and D3
datashader - Quickly and accurately render even the largest data.
apexcharts.js - 📊 Interactive JavaScript Charts built on SVG
DeepFaceLive - Real-time face swap for PC streaming or video calls
echarts - Apache ECharts is a powerful, interactive charting and data visualization library for browser
pygg - ggplot2 syntax in python. Actually wrapper around Wickham's ggplot2 in R
amcharts4 - The most advanced amCharts charting library for JavaScript and TypeScript apps.
candygraph - Fast by default, flexible 2D plotting library.