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I'm interested in developing a web-based application with rich time series charting functionality, where the charts can be constructed and manipulated on the client side. I would like the chart surface to be highly interactive, with the ability to pan and zoom with the mouse, click on lines, axes, etc. Importantly, I would prefer not to use Flash, AND I need to support Internet Explorer 6. My question is, is there anything out there that is going to allow me to do this, or must I use Flash? I have seen good charts that use the HTML5 canvas element, but I am not sure to what extent these would be supported in IE6 using excanvas.js, and if they are supported, what type of performance I can expect. I have not actually found a working example that ran in IE6.

Thanks.

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  • IE 6 is on its way out... its 2 versions old... I wouldn't worry about it.
    – Zoidberg
    Dec 16, 2009 at 18:15
  • creative IE: acid3.acidtests.org
    – miku
    Dec 16, 2009 at 18:24
  • Use the HTML5 Canvas interactive graphs in modern browsers, and for IE6 you could just have an Ajax call to the server where a graph generator could reside, returning an image that replaces the previous image on the page. It would be less interactive, but technically IE6 would be supported.
    – JeeBee
    Dec 16, 2009 at 18:32
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    Zoidberg: I agree with you that IE6 is on its way out; unfortunately, I'm targeting a corporate audience where most people are on locked down machines and where IE6 is still widely deployed.
    – Abiel
    Dec 16, 2009 at 19:35

2 Answers 2

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IE6 has VML support, VML is the almost equivalent of SVG Microsoft was pushing years ago.

Many frameworks today use VML to offer SVG and canvas functionalities.

Raphael, as already mentioned, is one.

Dojox.gfx (a dojo extension) is another one. It offers canvas-like functionality, and now has an SVG export function in place.

AmpleSDK is insanely awesome in enabling SVG (and more, even XUL) functionality everywhere feasible, even on IE5.5. (with some limitations)

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Remember IE has support for VML a rival to SVG, google use VML on maps when drawing road etc. I suspect they use xslt to translate their SVG output to VML.

http://www.lutanho.net/svgvml3d/index.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_Markup_Language

But I would recommend that you have a good look for a good existing cross browser library, that Highcharts mentioned by upper stage looks amazing - if you can compete with that fine, go for it...

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