Frappe Charts
react-vis
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Frappe Charts | react-vis | |
---|---|---|
2 | 21 | |
14,890 | 8,373 | |
0.1% | - | |
2.8 | 2.9 | |
11 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Frappe Charts
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Learn SVG with 25 examples – How to code images in HTML
As a frontend dev who also works in UX and graphics from time to time, I find it helpful to be able to do both, looking at SVGs as both a vector graphics format and a human-readable XML. IME the workflow depends more on whether any SVG is meant to be illustrative (like art) or quantitative (like charts) or interactive and animated/mutable (like a game).
For something like this bell example (https://svg-tutorial.com/svg/bell), you can certainly hand-code it if you're really math-inclined and can estimate the formulas of curves just by looking at them, but for us mere mortals, it's easier to just draw out the curves in a graphics app then export as an SVG. And for things like the ringer (is that what you call it? the orange ball thing at the bottom of the bell that strikes the bell to make the sound), being able to visually draw it on a canvas, change its size, drag it around and play with its colors and dimensions, etc. is really helpful. Figma is fine for simpler graphics, but it's really more of a UX tool than a graphic design tool, and Illustrator is a lot more powerful. Inkscape is a FOSS option.
In other circumstances, though, manipulating the SVG XML directly is also very helpful. Let's say you want to programatically generate a bar chart. If you have a big dataset, it's going to take a designer forever to manually plot them and change them every time the data changes. But it's easy for a dev to use Javascript (or any language) to draw each rectangle, programmatically adjust their heights and colors based on the data, add tooltips, etc. And that way you can dynamically update them in real-time whenever the data changes (like if the user selects a different date range, or new events come in). A lot of this is made easier by libs like https://frappe.io/charts or https://apexcharts.com. But before you take that approach, you should know that for complex charts, sometimes Canvas rendering (or just generating graphics in the backend) can be more performant than SVG.
SVGs can also be animated and interactive, not just with CSS transitions but by directly manipulating the XML geometries, like http://snapsvg.io/demos/ or https://www.svgator.com/ or https://codepen.io/collection/XpwMLO/. This is fine for product pages and such, but for really graphics-intensive apps (full games) it's probably slower than other rendering pipelines. (Not my specialty, won't speculate too much.)
TLDR Drawing them in a graphics app is usually easier for the designers, but the XML can be programmatically manipulated afterward to great effect.
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[Showoff Saturday] I made a thing that shows you your valorant match stats
charts: https://frappe.io/charts
react-vis
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Level Up Your Web App with Stunning React Charts: Introducing the Top 10 React Charts Libraries
Install react-vis by using the following command:
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React Chart Library Recommendations
I've heard good things about Uber's react-vis https://www.npmjs.com/package/react-vis
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Advice on learning front end for data visualization?
D3.js is great for custom data viz. You can get started by including the library in a script tag and not have to mess around with a bundler like Webpack until you are ready and just use plane CSS. D3.js doesn't work well with JS frameworks like React - it was jQuery like DOM manipulation functions. I find the best approach is to let D3 manage its chart and leave React for the UI. Or you can use a more React friendly library like React Viz from Uber. While D3 is great for custom data viz it's time consuming for standard charts. There are a lot of charting libraries out there like Chart.js. There is also Plot which is built on D3.js.
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The Top 6 ReactJS Chart Libraries for Data Visualization
React Vis averages 100,000+ weekly downloads, 8.3k stars and 850 forks on Github.
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Getting Started with Data Visualization in React using Chart.js
react-vis
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How to generate single ES5 bundle file from ES6 project using browserify
I am trying to use react-vis library in my project. In their readme file, they have asked to import library by adding following lines in non-node environment:
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Getting JS error: "Cannot call a class as a function"
I had an existing working react code written in Typescript (and hence ES6) using react-vis library. The library itself seem to use ES6.
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Getting JS error: Cannot call a class as a function
I have referenced react-vis library form unpkg as stated in their github repo:
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Github repositories from large enterprises for every javascript developer
The repository can be found here and is definitely worth taking a look.
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React Chart - Display data in charts
react-vis - Data visualization library based on React and d3.
What are some alternatives?
DHTMLX Gantt - GPL version of Javascript Gantt Chart
recharts - Redefined chart library built with React and D3
c3 - :bar_chart: A D3-based reusable chart library
GoJS, a JavaScript Library for HTML Diagrams - JavaScript diagramming library for interactive flowcharts, org charts, design tools, planning tools, visual languages.
p5.js - p5.js is a client-side JS platform that empowers artists, designers, students, and anyone to learn to code and express themselves creatively on the web. It is based on the core principles of Processing. http://twitter.com/p5xjs —
victory-chart - Chart Component for Victory
peity - Progressive <svg> pie, donut, bar and line charts
jQPlot - A Versatile and Expandable jQuery Plotting Plugin
echarts - Apache ECharts is a powerful, interactive charting and data visualization library for browser
visx - 🐯 visx | visualization components
d4 - A friendly reusable charts DSL for D3
react-chartjs-2 - React components for Chart.js, the most popular charting library