react-three-a11y
Chart.js
react-three-a11y | Chart.js | |
---|---|---|
7 | 184 | |
516 | 63,503 | |
1.6% | 0.3% | |
5.0 | 7.8 | |
3 months ago | 4 days ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
react-three-a11y
-
Show HN: 3D Framework for the Web. Built on Svelte and Three.js
Thanks! Threlte is "just" offering a declarative way to express Three.js. If you know how the `` component and its props and event handlers work, you can use the Three.js documentation for everything else.
Apart from that with Threlte I personally practice documentation-driven-development, so ecosystem packages are exhaustively documented. If you're missing something, let us know via an issue[1] or on Discord[2].
Accessibility is a topic we didn't care enough yet to be perfectly honest. Accessibility doesn't stop at screen readers though, it's about contrast, size, colors, motion, reachability, and so much more that we cannot provide and are a consumer topic. Naturally WebGL apps suffer from being practically invisible to screenreaders. There are workarounds[3] but essentially this has to be solved by consumers of Threlte (devs) and hopefully by browser vendors at some point in the future.
[1] https://github.com/threlte/threlte/issues
[2] http://chat.threlte.xyz
[3] https://github.com/pmndrs/react-three-a11y
-
how do you design scrolling "through" a website?
There is an accessibility library from drei: https://github.com/pmndrs/react-three-a11y
-
Making components Links (r3f/drei)
Caveat: Not the most accessible thing ever. The pmndrs crew made a tool that does this way more accessibly, this would be my production-grade recommendation: https://github.com/pmndrs/react-three-a11y
-
Is it even remotely practical to make Three.js experiences accessible? (controls/nav/text/objects/etc)
like /u/thesonglessbird said, it exists: https://github.com/pmndrs/react-three-a11y it covers screen readers, tabbing , focus indication, roles, and so on.
-
Chart.js 4.0 — new release of the popular open source charting library
That’s a bit of a cop out - React Three Fiber renders to a canvas too (obviously) and there’s a bunch of accessibility stuff in its semi-official ecosystem https://github.com/pmndrs/react-three-a11y
-
React Three Fiber and NextJS Starter Template
♿ R3F A11y
-
How to reproduce Death Stranding UI with react and react-three-fiber
To simulate the selected state you can try to use react-three-a11y. By wrapping our model with the component we will have access to hover, focus, and pressed state through useA11y() hook. We can try to display a SelectedMaterial based on the hover state for example.
Chart.js
- Ask HN: What's the best charting library for customer-facing dashboards?
-
Working Camp Inquiry - Glam Up my Markup
ChartsJS for inspiring me with the pie chart.
-
React: A Mess That Shouldn't Exist In Web Development
Most of frontend libraries are made with Vanilla JS. An example of library that you might frequently use is "Chart.js". But React is not compatible with Chart.js so here it comes "React-chartjs-2" A wrapper library to work with Chart.js in React ecosystem. Oh you want to use "three.js" for some cool 3D? you will need "React-three/fiber". In my case, I need to implement "telegram-web-app", not so fast, I have to create my own wrapper to be able to use it.
-
Frontend Developer Roadmap
Chart.js
-
Alternatives to Chart.js - A Series Exploring JavaScript Chart Comparisons
Chart.js is a free, open-source JavaScript library for data visualization, which supports eight chart types: bar, line, area, pie, bubble, radar, polar and scatter. It's licensed under the permissive MIT license and is renowned for being flexible, lightweight, easy to use and extendible.
-
What is the technology stack used to create these live charts?
They are images so it could be any number of things, datawrapper, charts.js, d3.js to name a few options.
-
Using AI to Generate Database Query Is Cool. But What About Access Control?
Charts.js for creating diagrams
-
Master Angular 16.1 & 16.2
Connie Leung wrote a tutorial to demonstrate how these new hooks work, integrating an Angular app with the Chart.js library: "DOM reading and writing with new lifecycle hooks in Angular"
-
2023 Self-Host User Survey Results
Thanks to all who participated in our 2023 Self-Host User Survey! Below is a link to the results, which we've visualized using Chart.js.
-
Frontend development roadmap
Chart.js
What are some alternatives?
gltf-pipeline - Content pipeline tools for optimizing glTF assets. :globe_with_meridians:
echarts - Apache ECharts is a powerful, interactive charting and data visualization library for browser
gltfjsx - 🎮 Turns GLTFs into JSX components
morris.js - Pretty time-series line graphs
react-three-fiber - 🇨🇭 A React renderer for Three.js [Moved to: https://github.com/pmndrs/react-three-fiber]
recharts - Redefined chart library built with React and D3
awesome-react-three-fiber - 🍕 A loose collection of cool r3f links, gifs, people, stuff
vega - A visualization grammar.
r3f-experiments - Experiments with React Three Fiber
chartist-js - Legacy Chartist Repo for old gh-pages
leva - 🌋 React-first components GUI
c3 - :bar_chart: A D3-based reusable chart library