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Frappe Charts: MIT Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No No Yes No No No No Yes Yes Yes No Yes No Yes No FusionCharts: Proprietary: Free for personal and non-commercial uses. [46] Paid for commercial applications. [47] Yes [48] Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes [49] No Google Charts: Free [50 ...
ExtJS 4 Charts – HTML5/SVG/Canvas, GPL or Commercial license; FusionCharts - JavaScript/HTML5. Commercial license; Google Charts - HTML5/SVG/VML, free; Highcharts; jqxChart - SVG/VML/HTML5 chart. Free and commercial licences; Plotly.js - MIT license; RGraph - HTML5/SVG/Canvas, MIT license; TeeChart JS – Cross-browser HTML5 Canvas, Open ...
RGraph is an HTML5 software library for charting written in native JavaScript. It was created in 2008. RGraph started as an easy-to-use commercial tool based on HTML5 canvas only. It's currently freely available to use under the open-source GPL license and supports more than 50 chart types in both SVG and canvas. [2] [3]
Highcharts is a software library for charting written in pure JavaScript, first released in 2009. The license is proprietary. It is free for personal/non-commercial uses and paid for commercial applications. It was created by Highsoft in Vik, Norway and has been regularly featured in the national media, such as Finansavisen and Dagsrevyen.
AnyChart 8.x first released in 2017 has a modular system and supports more than 90 chart types, including variations of basic charts, Gantt charts, meteorological and environmental data graphs (such as air temperature and precipitation, depth measures [4]), and maps, along with custom drawing and diverse options to work with data.
Google Charts can be used to create real-time dashboards for monitoring and reporting data, which may be useful in some career fields. Another article from the NCBI, "Using Google Charts API to Generate a Real-Time Report Dashboard" (NCBI article [ 4 ] ), demonstrated this feature's integration in healthcare and research.
Leaflet is an open-source, JavaScript-based library for creating interactive maps. It was created in 2011 by Volodymyr Agafonkin, a Ukrainian citizen. [ 5 ] It covers a wide range of features a developer would need in creating interactive maps.
In 2009, based on the experience of developing and utilizing Prefuse and Flare, Jeffrey Heer, Mike Bostock, and Vadim Ogievetsky of Stanford University's Stanford Visualization Group created Protovis, a JavaScript library to generate SVG graphics from data. The library was known to data visualization practitioners and academics.