Victor
chartist-js
Victor | chartist-js | |
---|---|---|
2 | 13 | |
353 | 67 | |
- | - | |
5.1 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Ruby | 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.
Victor
-
What questions do you consider important for a Ruby on Rails technical interview?
i'm super confused by "which gems you can't live without". is this my personal debugging collection of pry-rails, bullet and other things? i mean, whatever is required and does the job i guess. i absolutely love Dentaku gem and build awesome stuff with it in 2 different companies where it absolutely contributed to their product in huge ways (https://github.com/rubysolo/dentaku) . i also love Victor (https://github.com/DannyBen/victor) where i draw epic custom charts which are used in reports that been generated for billion dollar real estate funds.
-
Charts.css
That's not close to the same complexity, is it?
With the HTML + CSS solution, all my program has to produce is a HTML table. Very easy.
With SVG my program has to create not just a data table, but the custom SVG code to paint the actual charts. I'm actually doing that on pc-kombo, https://www.pc-kombo.com/us/benchmark/games/cpu/compare?ids%... shows it, the image is SVG. But it's created with https://github.com/DannyBen/victor/, so my ruby code has to describe all the details of that image, including manually saying how each bar chart should look. Even with the awesome victor library that wasn't all that easy.
Alternative is a JS library that produces the SVG code, but then it's exactly as complicated as with regular JS libraries, it just changes the output.
chartist-js
-
10+ JavaScript Chart Library you must use.📊
Chartist.Js (Free)
-
Vuenique, an open-source library bringing the power of low-level visualization to Vue
Anyone here have some good suggestions for mature, easy to use graph libraries for Vue 3? Maybe I should write a wrapper around Chartist myself...
-
Anyone knows tiny, beautiful js chart library?
The simplest/smallest would be https://gionkunz.github.io/chartist-js/
-
Create Beautiful Charts with Svelte and Chart js
Chartist - Really impressive charting library that is only 10KB (Gzip) with no dependencies. Round of applause for this awesome library that should play nice with svelte since it does not have any dependencies. I honestly can't remember why I didn't go with this for this tutorial but there's always time for another tutorial, am I right 😉?
-
Blazor Data Visualization Tools - Vector Map and Charts
For anyone interested or looking for a charting/vector map tool for Blazor, my organisation has developed and open sourced some packages that sit on top of a couple excellent JS libraries that handle these needs beautifully, Chartist.JS and JQuery Mapael. They are available in the nuget repository, source links below:
-
Widely Used Data Display and Analysis Libraries
Chartist.js is a very modern, SVG-based library. Its most prominent feature is the SVG animations in the charts produced with this library.
-
21 Popular JavaScript Libraries Every Web Developer Should Know
Ah, here is something for the data analysts! Chartist is a nice JavaScript library for creating simple, responsive and customizable charts for your website. Chartist uses SVG to render them; hence, your charts can also obey custom CSS rules.
-
Charts.css
This is interesting.
I really wish this super small library named Chartist was more actively developed. It's only 10kb in size and generates SVG charts.
The huge benefit of SVG is that it's natively responsive and also prints extremely well. Wheres CSS doesn't
https://gionkunz.github.io/chartist-js/
-
comicwriter.io
I suspect we would use something that renders in SVG, and has good CSS control, like Chartist that has a small well rounded feature set, and that is fairly light. SVG also leaves us with an option for better a11y by providing at least a chance of screen reader usage.
-
Tendielist - The hottest stocks on /r/WallStreetBets, now with stock value data
Just barebones Tailwind CSS and ChartistJS for charts.
What are some alternatives?
MiniMagick - mini replacement for RMagick
Chart.js - Simple HTML5 Charts using the <canvas> tag
Phashion - Ruby wrapper around pHash, the perceptual hash library for detecting duplicate multimedia files
heatmap.js - 🔥 JavaScript Library for HTML5 canvas based heatmaps
PSD.rb - Parse Photoshop files in Ruby with ease
jquery.sparkline - A plugin for the jQuery javascript library to generate small sparkline charts directly in the browser
ruby-vips - Ruby extension for the libvips image processing library.
DHTMLX Gantt - GPL version of Javascript Gantt Chart
lowdefy - The config web stack for business apps - build internal tools, client portals, web apps, admin panels, dashboards, web sites, and CRUD apps with YAML or JSON.
d3 - Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. :bar_chart::chart_with_upwards_trend::tada:
RMagick - Ruby bindings for ImageMagick
vis-timeline - 📅 Create a fully customizable, interactive timelines and 2d-graphs with items and ranges.