I have two basic bar charts and I am currently using XML/SWF Charts which is great but the problem I have is I need to be able to send these graphs via email to the user. As well as display them on the site.
I know sending Flash is a bad idea, I would love to find a way to convert my current graphs to an image, but am pretty certain there is no quick fix without building a work around myself.
Therefore what are the best open source or closed solutions for this problem.
I need to be able to display two graphs dynamically and then email them to users.
Any advice is appreciated.
You may want to check out the "Google Image Chart Api" (not to be confused with the Google Chart API).
http://code.google.com/apis/chart/image/
It allows you to generate numerious different types of charts just from the URL.
For example:
https://chart.googleapis.com/chart?cht=p3&chd=t:60,40&chs=250x100&chl=Hello|World
That URL could also be put into an HTML e-mail.
Alternatively, looking at this stackoverflow quesiton FLASH save frame, to image (tiff, bmp, jpg, gif, png)
If you can modify the flash movie. It appears that you can save frames in AS3 via BitmapData. So you may be able to send the data back to the server for processing (emailing). But I can't vouch for this as I haven't tried it.
jqPlot seems pretty good. Piwik uses it. http://www.jqplot.com/
I would recommend using gRaphael. It is a javascript library for rendering graphs using svg(or vml for IE8 and below). I've personally use it and it is quite good.
This probably won't work for you since you're not running .net, but for anyone else who's looking for resources for generating charts there's the MS Chart controls.
Related
Can anybody suggest me what should I do ?
I am generating the PDF report and in the report, I have to print the high chart graph. As high chart uses the javascript which will not execute in PDF file, So I have to create the graph on the server.
I read many posts, they suggest me that i have to create the image of that graph, but my question is how will I create the image to that graph ?
You could try using server-side "browser" or JS engine to generate your graphs; there are tools that can be used for that.
For that purpose I used those:
PhantomJS: some quirks regarding header/footers but a nice lot of examples on website
WkHTMLToPDF: highly customisable, but I had trouble setting timeouts properly so graphs are fully generated before PDF output
But there are others.
As Preuk says, phantomjs is a good choice and what I use, here's a guide to it on the Highcharts site: http://www.highcharts.com/news/56-improved-image-export-with-phantomjs
It can be fiddly to get going but works well once you get it up and running.
I'm looking for quite a specific technique.
The short of it:
I need HTML which can generate a line chart, as shown below (but without the background image. That is totally irrelevant)
However, I want to make it in HTML, without Javascript or Flash and in a way that the dots can be hovered to show more information.
The long of it:
The image shown above comes from the website jpgraph.net. That is a PHP library for creating charts. The downside of that however, is that it generates images. Since you have no clue of knowing where the dots are going to end up, you can't estimate where the hovers should be made.
Ofcourse there are also loads of javascript ways of doing this, but the graph should also work without javascript.
Flash is out of the question, since it should also work on tablets (read iPads)... And because it is flash...
All the information shown in the graph is generated by an external system. That means that the code should work and change the graph, depending on the information put in there.
EDIT:
I'm aware of the fact that it is easily done with javascript, and my fallback would be to offer a javascript version and as a fallback the php version. However, I'm hoping to find a way which doesn't need a fallback. Using 1 script to do the same task would be better than using two.
You should check out Charts.js by Nick Downie.
It has simple HTML5 Charts using the canvas element -
Charts and Graphs Included:
Bar Chart
Doughnut Chart
Line Graph
Pie Chart
Polar-area Chart
Radar Chart
Read the documentation here: http://www.chartjs.org/docs/
and download on GitHub here: https://github.com/nnnick/Chart.js
Hope I Helped
For those still interested: I fixed this using the jpgraph.net library. It's a php library which allows you to draw graphs on the server using data you get from somewhere else.
As enhzflep pointed out, since you have the data, you can calculate where the points will end up. This is however, quite a tedious job, but it's working in javascript-less browsers.
I have a question. I have to prepare a good report module for an application in PHP and MySQL. The report should be in two forms: a graph and a normal table with text. Tables and text are simple, but the graph is what I don't know how to begin. I was thinking about HTML5 (canvas) and Javascript, but honestly I don't know if this is a good idea.
I don't know if HTML5 is rendered on all browsers in the same way. A while ago it was a problem and I didn't have time to investigate it by myself. Good tips about new elements (canvas, article, footer and so on) on different browsers (including mobile ones) would be nice.
Maybe someone had similar problem and can give a tip on how to begin?
There are lots of free javascript tools for that, for example:
jqplot
Google charts
Google charts uses canvas for canvas capable browsers and flash for other browsers (like IE).
One thing you might consider is using wkhtmltopdf to generate a PDF of whatever HTML5 you want, using the consistent Webkit rendering engine. I'd set it up like this:
The user clicks a link that says "generate"
This loads a script which runs the report (generates the data, etc.) and outputs the HTML needed to a temporary file
Invoke wkhtmltopdf using the temporary HTML file as input and output it to a temporary PDF
Read the PDF into PHP, set the headers, and output the PDF to the browser
This should create a fairly seamless experience and shouldn't take more than a few seconds to run, and since it's Webkit, you can use whatever Javascript library you want to make charts (I like flot).
Depends on your target user group. If you wan't to hit the maximum ammount of web browsers you should probably go for a flash based graph solution. Flash however is not supported on iPad and iPhone.
If you want to support iPhone/iPad and still have an interactive graph, go with Canvas - however i don't belive it's supported by Internet Explorer yet.
I'm doing a bit of preliminary research on an upcoming project and I have a quick question that I figure I'll throw up here while I look elsewhere, in case anyone has any experience with this.
The question is simple: is it possible to read a QR code using JavaScript? Is there a remote service to which I can pass a bitmap object from a camera and do it that way? Are there currently any libraries that allow this?
The project is going to be deployed to various mobile devices and we'd like to try to use Appcelerator to make it work. I know Appcelerator does expose the Camera API on its host devices, but whatever we do with it has to be able to parse QR codes. Is this something that can be done?
Thanks in advance!
myk
I bet it's possible, but it would be a challenge. Someone's written an AS3 library for reading QR codes. I'd start by reading up on image manipulation in Canvas.
If you go down the remote API route, Kaywa have an API you may be able to use.
You can use the getUserMedia API to get video from the webcam and you could put it into a canvas element and use the canvas to read the pixels and decode a QR code.
I don't know of a library to decode QR codes but here is one library that can do bar codes.
There's a javascript library already, however the comments are mostly in Japanese and there's no documentation.
Because of memory limits for JavaScript on mobile devices, it's likely to take too long for practical use, if it is possible with purely JS.
I don't know exactly how the Appcelerator API works with external native libraries, but your best bet is to pass the image data to the native code (Objective-C or Java) and then use a lower-level library (like iphone-qrcode) to parse the QR code, then pass the result back to the JS execution context.
This has the added advantage of working offline, which a remote service could not do.
If you want a proof-of-concept, then here it is - a motion tracker written in pure Javascript.
However, support for it is not widespread right now. Only FF and the latest Webkit builds support it afaik.
Just noticed that you wanted this for a mobile device. Then absolutely go with a remote service. It will be really taxing even on the most high end devices assuming they even support it, which I highly doubt.
I was wondering if it's possible to create an image of a div inside a page in php, jquery or javascript? Or even just a screenshot of the entire page (on my own server - not external)..
What I want to do is create an image of a graph (drawn in via jQuery) and pass it onto a PDF, as I can't seem to get the jQuery to display in the pdf..
Because of the security risks, it is not possible to get Javascript to make a screenshot of a web page. This would allow you to steal credit card info, etc... You can use an active X control or something like that, but the client has to knowingly install it in order for things to work.
In PHP, you can create an image and place it on a web page, but again, you cannot see what is on the client's screen. It has to be done on the server before it is sent to the client.
Here is an example of a library you can use to draw a graph in PHP. http://www.aditus.nu/jpgraph/
You might be able to mimic what jQuery is doing in your script but it will take a shift in your applications design.
Take a look at this article:
http://www.developerfusion.com/code/181/capture-screenshot/
It's not client-side code, but you mentioned PHP so maybe server-side code is an option. I don't think you can do it client-side...
How about using a server side graph generator, for example for PHP? Maybe the transition hurts but you'd get a really stable and simple solution.
If you describe what kind of charts you exactly generate and what server side options you have, I'm sure you'll get some specific hints.
Your best bet is to use the GD library on the server to generate the graph as needed. There's no practical way to screencap the browser canvas. Check out this PHP graphing library, it may be what you're looking for:
http://graphpite.sourceforge.net/
If you run into problems where you're doing processing on the client-side that don't exist on the server (i.e.: summing up rows or taking in user settings from cookies), maybe you need to consider passing that data back to the server and letting your hosting handle it (after all, that's why you run a server with lots of RAM and a big CPU, to crunch numbers).
If your javascript draws the graph on a canvas, you can serialize the canvas and then send it to the server using POST.
I don't know if jquery can draw the graph on a canvas, but if the graph is a simple one you could probably code it yourself as canvas has drawing tools already.
Obviously, this only works with browsers supporting canvas.