On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 4:44 PM, Madhura Jayaratne madhura.cj@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 4:47 PM, Madhura Jayaratne madhura.cj@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 4:27 PM, Tyron Madlener tyronx@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 12:15 PM, Madhura Jayaratne madhura.cj@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, May 20, 2011 at 2:43 PM, Michal Čihař michal@cihar.com wrote:
Hi
Dne Wed, 18 May 2011 18:01:15 +0530 Madhura Jayaratne madhura.cj@gmail.com napsal(a):
I did it as a test run and it is not finalized. Unfortunately I can't get flot to draw polygons with inner rings and that was a dead end for me. So right now I'm looking into generating all the GIS visualizations with SVG. In particular I am trying to generate them with jQuery-SVG.
Well, I agree that flot makes the life very easy for developers and the graphs are rich in quality. However you get less control over the plot. For example with SVG, I can manipulate each elements in the plot, but in flot that ability is limited to few events they have exposed. I'm not sure how this applies in your case, you might not want to manipulate it at all.
Okay, I think we should use as few graphing libraries as possible, ideally only one, but I'm not sure if it is possible. So let's summarize what every project needs and try to find viable solution.
What it needs to visualize GIS data is a library that lets you draw freely. On the other hand a charting library would let you enter data for a set of series and would draw various types of charts accordingly. When trying to use a charting library to visualize GIS data (for the rich functionality they offer), most of the time we would have to hack the library. For example POINT, MULTIPOINT and LINESTRING can be drawn with scatter charts and line charts. However to draw a MULTILINESTRING with two LINESTRINGs you'll have to draw 2 series giving them the same series name and same color, effectively hacking the library. The problem is with legends, legend would show two entries. The case gets worse when it comes to POLYGONS and MULTIPOLYGONS, worst when these have inner rings :( Thats why I had to give up flot and settle for SVG, in particular jQuery SVG, which gives control over what is being drawn. However now I have to manage a number of features such as zooming, panning, tooltips with my own code.
I think for charts, it would be nice to save them, but that does not seem to work with neither flot nor jQuery-SVG.
Wouldn't it be possible to write a sort of flot plugin for your case? Maybe thats even the easier way, than to program zooming, panning, tooltips etc. yourself. Then I could also use flot for my statistics page :D
Nice idea :) But that would most probably amount to re-writing flot altogether. The thing is flot is not designed to draw shapes and all. IMO handling zooming, panning and tooltips with SVG is far easier than that :) -- Thanks and Regards, Madhura Jayaratne
Hi Tyron, Btw jQuery-SVG already has an extension for graphing. Pls have a look at the Graphing section of jQuery-SVG[1] and jQuery SVG Graphing Reference section[2] to see whether it suffices for your needs.
Oh nice. I'll check it out.
-- Thanks and Regards, Madhura Jayaratne
[1] http://keith-wood.name/svg.html%C2%A0(See the Graphing section) [2] http://keith-wood.name/svggraphRef.html