vis.js ================== Vis.js is a dynamic, browser based visualization library. The library is designed to be easy to use, handle large amounts of dynamic data, and enable manipulation of the data. The library consists of the following components: - DataSet and DataView. A flexible key/value based data set. Add, update, and remove items. Subscribe on changes in the data set. A DataSet can filter and order items, and convert fields of items. - DataView. A filtered and/or formatted view on a DataSet. - Graph2d. Plot data on a timeline with lines or barcharts. - Graph3d. Display data in a three dimensional graph. - Network. Display a network (force directed graph) with nodes and edges. - Timeline. Display different types of data on a timeline. The vis.js library is developed by [Almende B.V](http://almende.com). ## Install Install via npm: npm install vis Install via bower: bower install vis Or download the library from the github project: [https://github.com/almende/vis.git](https://github.com/almende/vis.git). ## Load To use a component, include the javascript and css files of vis in your web page: ```html ``` or load vis.js using require.js. Note that vis.css must be loaded too. ```js require.config({ paths: { vis: 'path/to/vis/dist', } }); require(['vis'], function (math) { // ... load a visualization }); ``` A timeline can be instantiated as: ```js var timeline = new vis.Timeline(container, data, options); ``` Where `container` is an HTML element, `data` is an Array with data or a DataSet, and `options` is an optional object with configuration options for the component. ## Example A basic example on loading a Timeline is shown below. More examples can be found in the [examples directory](https://github.com/almende/vis/tree/master/examples) of the project. ```html Timeline basic demo
``` ## Build To build the library from source, clone the project from github git clone git://github.com/almende/vis.git The source code uses the module style of node (require and module.exports) to organize dependencies. To install all dependencies and build the library, run `npm install` in the root of the project. cd vis npm install Then, the project can be build running: npm run build To automatically rebuild on changes in the source files, once can use npm run watch This will both build and minify the library on changes. Minifying is relatively slow, so when only the non-minified library is needed, one can use the `watch-dev` script instead: npm run watch-dev ## Custom builds The folder `dist` contains bundled versions of vis.js for direct use in the browser. These bundles contain the all visualizations and includes external dependencies such as hammer.js and moment.js. The source code of vis.js consists of commonjs modules, which makes it possible to create custom bundles using tools like [Browserify](http://browserify.org/) or [Webpack](http://webpack.github.io/). This can be bundling just one visualization like the Timeline, or bundling vis.js as part of your own browserified web application. Note that hammer.js v1.0.6 or newer is required. #### Example 1: Bundle a single visualization For example, to create a bundle with just the Timeline and DataSet, create an index file named **custom.js** in the root of the project, containing: ```js exports.DataSet = require('./lib/DataSet'); exports.Timeline = require('./lib/timeline/Timeline'); ``` Install browserify globally via `[sudo] npm install -g browserify`, then create a custom bundle like: browserify custom.js -o vis-custom.js -s vis This will generate a custom bundle *vis-custom.js*, which exposes the namespace `vis` containing only `DataSet` and `Timeline`. The generated bundle can be minified with uglifyjs (installed globally with `[sudo] npm install -g uglify-js`): uglifyjs vis-custom.js -o vis-custom.min.js The custom bundle can now be loaded like: ```html ... ``` #### Example 2: Exclude external libraries The default bundle `vis.js` is standalone and includes external dependencies such as hammer.js and moment.js. When these libraries are already loaded by the application, vis.js does not need to include these dependencies itself too. To build a custom bundle of vis.js excluding moment.js and hammer.js, run browserify in the root of the project: browserify index.js -o vis-custom.js -s vis -x moment -x hammerjs This will generate a custom bundle *vis-custom.js*, which exposes the namespace `vis`, and has moment and hammerjs excluded. The generated bundle can be minified with uglifyjs: uglifyjs vis-custom.js -o vis-custom.min.js The custom bundle can now be loaded as: ```html ... ``` #### Example 3: Bundle vis.js as part of your (commonjs) application When writing a web application with commonjs modules, vis.js can be packaged automatically into the application. Create a file **app.js** containing: ```js var moment = require('moment'); var DataSet = require('vis/lib/DataSet'); var Timeline = require('vis/lib/timeline/Timeline'); var container = document.getElementById('visualization'); var data = new DataSet([ {id: 1, content: 'item 1', start: moment('2013-04-20')}, {id: 2, content: 'item 2', start: moment('2013-04-14')}, {id: 3, content: 'item 3', start: moment('2013-04-18')}, {id: 4, content: 'item 4', start: moment('2013-04-16'), end: moment('2013-04-19')}, {id: 5, content: 'item 5', start: moment('2013-04-25')}, {id: 6, content: 'item 6', start: moment('2013-04-27')} ]); var options = {}; var timeline = new Timeline(container, data, options); ``` Install the application dependencies via npm: npm install vis moment The application can be bundled and minified: browserify app.js -o app-bundle.js uglifyjs app-bundle.js -o app-bundle.min.js And loaded into a webpage: ```html
``` ## Test To test the library, install the project dependencies once: npm install Then run the tests: npm test ## License Copyright (C) 2010-2014 Almende B.V. Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.