A charting library streamlined for building interactive visualizations for the Qlik product suites.
npm install picasso.js
import picasso from 'picasso.js';
picasso.chart({
element: document.querySelector('#container'), // container must have a width and height specified
settings: {
scales: {
budget: { max: 5000, min: 0 },
sales: { max: 11000, min: 3000, invert: true },
},
components: [
{
type: 'axis',
scale: 'budget',
layout: {
dock: 'bottom',
},
},
{
type: 'axis',
scale: 'sales',
layout: {
dock: 'left',
},
},
{
type: 'point',
data: [
{ sales: 7456, margin: 0.3, budget: 4557 },
{ sales: 5603, margin: 0.7, budget: 2234 },
{ sales: 8603, margin: 0.6, budget: 4121 },
{ sales: 4562, margin: 0.4, budget: 1234 },
{ sales: 9873, margin: 0.9, budget: 3453 },
],
settings: {
x: { scale: 'budget', fn: (d) => d.scale(d.datum.value.budget) },
y: { scale: 'sales', fn: (d) => d.scale(d.datum.value.sales) },
size: (d) => d.datum.value.margin,
},
},
],
},
});
More examples and documentation can be found at qlik.dev
The API can be found at the Qlik developer portal
name | status | description |
---|---|---|
picasso.js | A charting library streamlined for building visualizations for the Qlik Sense Analytics platform. | |
picasso-plugin-hammer | A plugin that binds events using HammerJS. This plugin provides an API for binding HammerJS recognizers to the chart element in a declarative way. | |
picasso-plugin-q | The q plugin registers a q dataset type that makes it a bit easier to extract data from a QIX hypercube. It also contains a brush helper that can be used to find appropriate selections in the underlying data engine. |
picasso.js
is MIT licensed.
Please follow the instructions in our contributing guide.