Vega is a visualization grammar, a declarative format for creating, saving, and sharing interactive visualization designs. With Vega you can describe data visualizations in a JSON format, and generate interactive views using either HTML5 Canvas or SVG.
For documentation, tutorials, and examples, see the Vega website. For a description of changes between Vega 2 and later versions, please refer to the Vega Porting Guide.
Are you using Vega in a web application built with a bundler such as Webpack or Browserify? If so, and you do not need server-side rendering support, you might prefer using vega-lib to include Vega in your app. The vega-lib repository also houses our general test suite.
For a basic setup allowing you to build Vega and run examples:
- Clone
https://github.com/vega/vega
. - Run
yarn
to install dependencies. If you don't have yarn installed, see https://yarnpkg.com/en/docs/install. (If you do not wish to install yarn, you can alternatively runnpm install
. However, you will not be guaranteed to have dependencies matching those of the current release.) - Once installation is complete, use
yarn build
to build output files.
This repository includes the website and documentation in the docs
folder. To launch it, run bundle install
and bundle exec jekyll serve
in the docs
folder. The last command launches a local webserver. Now, you can open http://127.0.0.1:4000/vega/
to see the website.
Interested in contributing to Vega? Please see our contribution and development guidelines, subject to our code of conduct.
Looking for support, or interested in sharing examples and tips? Post to the Vega discussion forum or join the Vega slack organization!