See documentation →
Report Bug
·
Join Our Slack
·
Roadmap
·
X
Latitude lets you create API endpoints on top of your database/warehouse using just SQL, and embed interactive visualizations natively in your favorite frontend framework or through an iframe.
It's fast to get started, easy to maintain, and scales with your data.
-
☁️ Connect to any database or data warehouse
-
📊 Easily compose parameterized SQL queries and expose them as API endpoints
-
📦 Built-in cache layer for lightning-fast query performance
-
🛠 Integrations with all common frontend frameworks (React, Svelte, Vue, VanilaJS)
-
🎨 Optional layout engine to build standalone dashboards using Svelte and Tailwind
-
🖥️ Support for embedding dashboards via iframe
-
🌎 Deploy with a single command
latitude deploy
-
🔒 SSL-ready, encrypted parameters in url and parameterized queries to protect against SQL injection attacks
-
👥 Open-source driven by the community
You can find sample projects using Latitude in action in the examples directory.
Here’s a quick getting started guide to get the sample app up and running:
Run the following command to install the Latitude CLI globally on your machine:
npm install -g @latitude-data/cli
Note that if you're using Windows, you might need to follow these instructions first: Windows setup.
Run this command to create a new Latitude project:
latitude start
The CLI will ask you the project name. Once you’re done, you’ll have a new directory with a sample app that you can run and customize.
cd my-new-app
latitude dev
This will start the development server and open the sample app in your browser.
Set up the connection to your database or data warehouse through a simple configuration file.
type: postgres
details:
database: db
user: username
password: ••••••••••••••••
host: postgres.example.com
port: 5432
schema: public
ssl: true
We do not recommend to store your database credentials in the configuration file. Instead, you can use environment variables to store your credentials securely. Find out more about this in the documentation.
We support the following sources:
- Athena
- BigQuery
- Clickhouse
- Databricks
- DuckDB
- MS SQL
- MySQL
- PostgreSQL
- Redshift
- Snowflake
- SQLite
- Trino
Find out more about connecting to sources in the documentation.
Latitude makes it easy to fetch data from your database and expose it via an API endpoint in JSON format so that it can be easily consumed by your frontend application.
You can use parameters in your SQL queries to filter data based on external inputs. For example, you can create a query that fetches movies released between two years:
select id,
title,
release_year,
type,
runtime,
imdb_score
from titles
where release_year between { param('start_year') } and { param('end_year') }
Additionally, you can reference other queries in your SQL to create composable data pipelines. For example, this is a query that uses the results of the previous one to display the count of titles released each year:
select
release_year,
count(*) as total_titles,
from { ref('titles') }
group by 1
order by 1 asc
Latitude will automatically expose these queries as API endpoints that you can fetch from your frontend application.
To use these endpoints with parameters, you can pass them in the URL. For example, to fetch movies released between 2000 and 2020, you can do:
curl http://localhost:3000/titles?start_year=2000&end_year=2020
Use our React components to fetch data from your API and display it in your application.
npm install @latitude-data/react
Once the React package is installed in your project, add the LatitudeProvider:
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom/client';
import { LatitudeProvider } from '@latitude-data/react';
ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root')!).render(
<React.StrictMode>
<LatitudeProvider
apiConfig={{ host: 'https://localhost:3000' }}
>
<Example />
</LatitudeProvider>
</React.StrictMode>,
);
You can fetch data from your Latitude data server with the useQuery hook:
import { useQuery } from '@latitude-data/react';
import { useCallback } from 'react';
export default function Example() {
const { data: movies, isFetching, compute } = useQuery({
queryPath: 'titles',
params: {
start_year: '2000',
end_year: '2020',
},
});
const caption = isFetching ? 'Loading movies...' : 'List of movies';
const refresh = useCallback(() => compute(), [compute]);
return (2
<div className='p-4 flex flex-col gap-y-4'>
<h1 className='text-4xl font-medium'>React Example with Latitude</h1>
<Button onClick={refresh}>Refresh</Button>
<Table>
{!isFetching ? <MovieList movies={movies!} /> : <MovieListSkeleton />}
<TableCaption>{caption}</TableCaption>
</Table>
</div>
);
}
If you want to build standalone dashboards, you can use our layout engine to create a dashboard with multiple visualizations.
To do so, simply create an index.html
file under the views
directory with the following content:
<View class='gap-8 p-8'>
<Row>
<Text.H2 class='font-bold'>Netflix titles released over time</Text.H2>
</Row>
<Row>
<LineChart query='titles-agg' x='release_year' y='total_titles' />
</Row>
<Row>
<Table query='titles' />
</Row>
</View>
This will create a dashboard with a line chart and a table displaying the data fetched from the titles
and titles-agg
queries.
This dashboard can be accessed by navigating to http://localhost:3000/
.
To pass parameters to the queries, add them to the URL as query parameters. For example: http://localhost:3000/?start_year=2000&end_year=2020
.
Another option is to use our <Input>
component to create a form that allows users to input parameters. Find out more about this in the documentation.
You can embed the dashboard in your application using an iframe. To do so, simply add the following code to your application:
<iframe
src="http://localhost:3000/queries?start_year=2000&end_year=2020"
width="100%"
height="600"
/>
If you're using React, we released a React component that simplifies the process of embedding dashboards in your application. Check out the documentation to learn more.
To deploy your Latitude project, run the following command:
latitude deploy
This will deploy your project to the Latitude cloud, and you will get a URL where your project is hosted.
If it's your first time deploying, make sure to log in or sign up to Latitude by running latitude login
or latitude signup
respectively.
You can also deploy your project to your own infrastructure. Find out more about this in the documentation.
The Latitude community can be found on Slack where you can ask questions, voice ideas, and share your projects with other people.
Contributions to Latitude are welcome and highly appreciated.
If you are interested in contributing, please join us on our Slack community, open an issue, or contribute a pull request.