SOCRAT: SOCR Analytics Toolbox
A Dynamic Web Toolbox for Interactive Data Processing, Analysis, and Visualization
- Relevant publications
- Issue-tracking and project management
- Contribution guidelines
- SOCR web site
- Note: project is under development, new features are in pending Pull Requests, unit tests currently are not passing, bugs are possible
To run SOCRAT locally, or create your own module, or contribute to the project, follow these steps to setup your environment.
First, install Node.js if you haven't yet. npm
is the package manager for Node.js
and comes bundled with it.
Clone the repository:
$> git clone https://github.com/SOCR/SOCRAT.git
$> cd SOCRAT
[optional] To see latest changes or to contribute to the project you can switch to the dev
branch:
$> git checkout dev
$> git pull
Now, install all the dependencies:
$> npm install
Some errors and warnings may appear during the installation – they can be ignored as long as the project compiles.
[optional] Start the development server with:
$> npm run serve
You will see the application running at localhost:8080
and the page will live
reload on saved changes in source code.
To build the project and start the web-server:
$> npm run build
$> node server.js
Now you should be able to access SOCRAT at localhost:3000
.
Also see how to add test datasets and general contribution instructions.
The modern web is a successful platform for large scale interactive web applications, including visualizations. Statistics Online Computational Resource (SOCR) provides a web-based collection of tools for interactive modeling and visual data analysis that has a large user base. However, most of SOCR applets eventually became practically unavailable to end users as new versions of browsers disabled Java by default as a response to numerous vulnerability reports. Thus, we designed an open-source platform to build Statistics Online Computational Resource Analytical Toolbox (SOCRAT). Platform design defines: (1) a specification for an architecture for building VA applications with multi-level modularity, and (2) methods for optimizing module interaction, re-usage, and extension. SOCRAT relies on this platform for integration of a number of data management, analysis, and visualization modules into an easily customizable web application including interfaces for merging third-party components. This ability allows SOCRAT to balance expressive, interactive and processing capabilities, efficiency, compatibility, and accessibility. Multi-level modularity and declarative specifications enable easy customizations of the application, for instance, for a specific project. Online demo demonstrates how SOCRAT can be used for data input, display, and storage, with interactive visualization and analysis. For more details see the publication list below.
If you find our work useful, please cite our paper:
Alexandr A. Kalinin, Selvam Palanimalai, and Ivo D. Dinov. 2017. SOCRAT Platform Design: A Web Architecture for Interactive Visual Analytics Applications. In Proceedings of HILDA’17, Chicago, IL, USA, May 14, 2017, 6 pages. DOI:10.1145/3077257.3077262
@inproceedings{kalinin2017socrat,
author = {Kalinin, Alexandr A. and Palanimalai, Selvam and Dinov, Ivo D.},
title = {SOCRAT Platform Design: A Web Architecture for Interactive Visual Analytics Applications},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 2Nd Workshop on Human-In-the-Loop Data Analytics},
series = {HILDA'17},
year = {2017},
isbn = {978-1-4503-5029-7},
location = {Chicago, IL, USA},
pages = {1-6},
articleno = {8},
url = {http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/3077257.3077262},
doi = {10.1145/3077257.3077262},
publisher = {ACM}
}
CoffeeScript
Jade
Less
Webpack
Node.js
Bootstrap
jQuery
AngularJS
with AngularUI
D3.js
Handsontable
with ngHandsontable
jStat
Wrangler
The LGPL v3.0 License
Copyright (c) 2013-2019 Statistics Online Computational Resource (SOCR)
All SOCR programs, materials, tools and resources are developed by and freely disseminated to the entire community. Users may revise, extend, redistribute, modify under the terms of the Lesser GNU General Public License as published by the Open Source Initiative. All efforts should be made to develop and distribute factually correct, useful, portable and extensible resource all available in all digital formats for free over the Internet.
SOCR resources are distributed in the hope that they will be useful, but without any warranty; without any explicit, implicit or implied warranty for merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details see http://opensource.org/licenses/LGPL-3.0.