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Plotly is a technical computing company headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, that develops online data analytics and visualization tools. Plotly provides online graphing, analytics, and statistics tools for individuals and collaboration, as well as scientific graphing libraries for Python, R, MATLAB, Perl, Julia, Arduino, JavaScript [1] and REST.
Create publication-quality PS/PDF plots, Python scripting and plugin interface Visifire: Independent of server side scripting: Proprietary: No 2008: June 5, 2014 / 5.1.7-0 Mac, Windows: VisIt: GUI, C++, Python, and Java: BSD: Yes 2002: May 2018 / 2.13.2 Linux, Mac, Windows: Designed to handle very large data sets Webix: JavaScript library ...
Library Name License Free Supported Chart Types Supported Bar Chart Types Other Features Interactivity Rendering Technologies Databinding HTML 5 Canvas Line Timeline Scatter ...
Graphviz (short for Graph Visualization Software) is a package of open-source tools initiated by AT&T Labs Research for drawing graphs (as in nodes and edges, not as in bar charts) specified in DOT language scripts having the file name extension "gv". It also provides libraries for software applications to use the tools.
Vega is used in the back end of several data visualization systems, for example Voyager. [4] [5] Chart specifications are written in JSON and rendered in a browser or exported to either vector or bitmap images. Bindings for Vega-Lite have been written in several programming languages, such as the Python package Altair, [6] to make
A cross-browser JavaScript library/API used to create and display animated 3D computer graphics on a Web browser. Unity: C#: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes .NET transpiled to Wasm (1.0 and 2.0) Yes [4] FBX, OBJ, DAE, glTF, STL No Proprietary: Offers a WebGL build option since version 5. [5] Verge3D: JavaScript: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Native (1.0 and 2.0) Yes
WebGL is a JavaScript interface for OpenGL ES API, promoted by Khronos. WebGPU an under-development web standard and JavaScript API for accelerated graphics and compute. High-level 3D API
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. [6]