Book Image

HTML5 Graphing and Data Visualization Cookbook

By : Ben Fhala
Book Image

HTML5 Graphing and Data Visualization Cookbook

By: Ben Fhala

Overview of this book

The HTML5 canvas tag makes creating any plot shape easy, all you have to do then is fill it with exciting visualizations written in JavaScript or using other visualization tools. "HTML5 Graphing and Data Visualization Cookbook" is the perfect break into the world of Canvas, charts, and graphs in HTML5 and JavaScript. In this book we will go through a journey of getting to know the technology by creating and planning data-driven visualizations. This cookbook is organized in a linear, progressive way so it can be read from start to finish, as well as be used as a resource for specific tasks.This book travels through the steps involved in creating a fully interactive and animated visualization in HTML5 and JavaScript. You will start from very simple "hello world"ù samples and quickly dive deeper into the world of graphs and charts in HTML5. Followed by learning how canvas works and carrying out a group of tasks geared at taking what we learned and implementing it in a variety of chart types. With each chapter the content becomes more complex and our creations become more engaging and interactive.Our goal is that by the end of this book you will have a strong foundation; knowing when to create a chart on your own from scratch and when it would be a good idea to depend on other APIs.We finish our book in our last two chapters exploring Google maps and integrating everything we learnt into a full project.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
HTML5 Graphing and Data Visualization Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Making an interactive click meter


In this next example, we will focus on one more powerful feature of any client-side programming—the ability to interact with the user and the ability to update data dynamically. To keep it simple, let's revisit an old chart—the bar chart from Chapter 3, Creating Cartesian-based Graphs—and integrate a counter that will count how many times a user clicks on an HTML document in any given second and update the chart accordingly.

How to do it...

Most of the steps are going to be familiar, if you have worked on the bar chart from Chapter 3, Creating Cartesian-based Graphs. So, let's run through them and then focus on the new logic:

  1. Let's create some helper variables.

    var currentObject = {label:1,
      value:0,
      style:"rgba(241, 178, 225, .5)"};
      var colorOptions = ["rgba(241, 178, 225, 1)","#B1DDF3","#FFDE89","#E3675C","#C2D985"];
    
      var data = [];
    
    
    var context;
    var wid;
    var hei;
  2. Follow this with our init function.

    function init(){
    
      var can = document.getElementById...