/elm-visualization

A data visualization library for Elm

Primary LanguageElmMIT LicenseMIT

Elm-visualization

Docs | Examples | GitHub | Changelog | #visualization on Elm slack

This project is designed to give you all the tools needed to build data visualizations. It is not a charting library in the sense that you have pre-bundled Excel-style charts, but it should contain all the tools to make building such charts relatively easy. The advantage is that you are free to design and build data visualizations that uniquely suite your needs.

Learn by example

Examples

Getting started

You will need to have elm installed. Then run:

elm init
elm install gampleman/elm-visualization

However, there are other packages that you will likely need to produce a visualization. Which depends somewhat on what you want to achieve, here are some common ones:

You can use this Ellie to run the examples, since it has all the dependencies already installed into it.

What's included?

Scales

Most of the time you have data that has properties that you want to display on the screen, however these properties typically aren't in pixels. Scales solve this fundamental problem by giving you convenient ways to transform raw data into positions, sizes, colors, labels and other ways to display data.

Axis

A component that allows you to visualize a Scale. Those little ticks that describe the dimensions of a plot.

Shapes

This module gives you ways to draw some fundamental shapes used in data visualization, including lines (as in line or area charts), as well as arcs (as in pie charts).

Force Layout

Use a simulation of physical forces to do layout. Suitable for i.e. network graphs.

Interpolation

Smoothly transition between pairs of values. Useful for animation, or generating gradients of values.

Transition

Build complex animations using Interpolation.

Histogram

Compute histograms of data.

Zoom

Build pan and zoom user interactions.

Statistics

Process data to extract useful insights for visualizations.

Acknowledgements

Heavily inspired by parts of the D3 library by Mike Bostock. However since Elm provides a great DOM abstraction already, selections are not part of this library.

Contributing

This library is still under active development, so please submit feature requests iff you are also willing to implement them. Bug reports are welcome.