JavaScript InfoVis Toolkit
The JavaScript InfoVis Toolkit provides tools for creating Interactive Data Visualizations for the Web. The toolkit implements advanced features of information visualization like TreeMaps, an adapted visualization of trees based on the SpaceTree, a focus+context technique to plot Hyperbolic Trees, a radial layout of trees with advanced animations (RGraph) and other visualizations.[2]
| Original author(s) | Nicolas Garcia Belmonte |
|---|---|
| Stable release | 2.0.2
/ July 1, 2013[1] |
| Repository | |
| Written in | JavaScript |
| License | MIT |
| Website | thejit |
In November 2010 the toolkit was acquired by the Sencha Labs Foundation.[3] Further development on the toolkit involves WebGL support,[4] CSS3 animations and more visualizations.
The JavaScript InfoVis Toolkit was chosen as a mentoring organization and project for the Google Summer of Code 2011[5]
List of Featured Visualizations
Some of the featured visualizations are:
Projects using the JavaScript InfoVis Toolkit
- The White House Budget Visualization
- Al jazeera Twitter Dashboard
- Mozilla Community Map
- Texas Tribune Legislature Application
- Argentinian Newspaper La Nacion News Cloud Application
gollark: But I suppose I could drop the text bit, that can be reconstructed laterâ„¢ and search doesn't really need it.
gollark: In case I need the raw HTML later.
gollark: It doesn't ignore robots.txt, I just manually whitelist sites.
gollark: But it's non-evil, so I would set it to 0, silly.
gollark: When it downloads a page, it stores:- the raw HTML of it, gzipped- the extracted text of it- a timestamp- the frequency of every word (well, token) in the page- every link from that page
References
External links
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