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d3act - d3 with React

Background

d3 has been the de facto standard when it comes to data visualisations for a while now and React has recently emerged as the go-to library for building user interfaces. d3 and React are both data-centric libraries, making them a natural fit; d3 takes a data-driven approach and React aims to solve the problem of data changing over time in the context of building large applications.

In recent months, there have been various approaches documented & implemented in order to showcase how to effectively use d3 and React together, especially with a focus on letting React do the SVG rendering:

Nicolas Hery's "Integrating D3.js visualizations in a React app" talks about letting d3 do all the work after React has finished rendering components in the DOM. d3act is inspired by @nicolas_hery's approach; create a lightweight React component wrapper that maps React's lifecycle methods componentDidMount, componentDidUpdate and componentWillUnmount into a d3 chart's create, update and unmount methods respectively.

d3act and the idea behind it was first presented at ReactEurope 2015 as a five minute lightning talk; you can watch it here.

How does this improve DX?

During the keynote at ReactEurope 2015, vjeux introduced the idea of DX (Developer Experience) - akin to UX (User Experience), but with a focus on enabling developers to build great UX with the best possible tools & technologies. Things like Babel, Redux and Radium definitely tick the DX box.

So how does d3act improve DX? The need for creating d3act first emerged while building multiple d3-based visualisations to handle very large data sets in a single page in the context of a React app. Letting React manipulate and render SVG elements proved to slow things down - not by much, but at the scale of data that was being handled, this became a bottleneck.

At the same time, all existing visualisations were already written in the standard d3 way which performed best - so in order to improve the DX let's wrap these existing d3 visualisations in a lightweight React component that can extend to any such visualisations.

As a result, d3act aims to enable a better DX by enabling:

  • Use of existing d3 visualisations
  • Keep creating d3 visualisations using the same syntax
  • Don't worry about taking apart d3's approach and reimplement the same things in React
  • Integrate seamlessly with React applications
  • Utilise what each library is best at

Getting Started

npm install d3act

Examples

It's as simple as...

<Chart
    type={"pie"}
    width={300}
    height={300}
    showTooltips={true}
    data={
        {
            "React": 2,
            "Relay": 12,
            "GraphQL": 5,
        }
    }
/>

...and you can use already existing charts

Ensure your existing charts have constructor, create, update and unmount functions.

class PreExistingChart {
    constructor(el, props) {
        this.el = el;
        this.props = props;
    }

    create(data) {
        // Create your chart
    }

    update(data) {
        // Update your chart
    }

    unmount() {
        this.el.remove();
    }
}

<Chart
    type={"custom"}
    customChart={PreExistingChart}
    data={
        {
            "React": 2,
            "Relay": 12,
            "GraphQL": 5,
        }
    }
/>

To see examples in action locally:

npm install
npm run examples

Head to http://localhost:8080/ and see charts in action as below:

Bubble chart Bar chart Pie chart

How do I update charts?

Just update your data state and all else is handled for you.

What's next?

  • Improve API so that you can customise charts beyond just dimensions and margins
  • Better error handling
  • Manage state better
  • Improve tooltips & make them more extensible
  • Think about making expected data for each visualisation a little more uniform
  • Add tests

Is this the best way to combine d3 and React?

This is one way of combining d3 with React; there are plenty of other ways as already outlined - pick what works best for you. I don't think there is such a thing as a global 'best way' of combining d3 with React, it very much comes down to what you want to do with it.

Contributing

All contributions are welcome; fork the repository, make your changes and open a pull request. Try to stick to the coding conventions that are already in place.

To build things locally, you can just grunt watch from the project's root directory. This will also lint code using ESLint; if you would like to just lint the code, you could also just use grunt lint.

License

MIT

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