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My goal is to make a plot that you can interact with in the browser. Ideally, I would like a well-documented and mature JavaScript plotting library that supports SVG. As far as I can tell, this doesn't exist, though please correct me if I'm wrong.

I've identified a couple alternatives.

  1. Use a JavaScript graphics library (e.g. Raphael) and draw everything from scratch. This seems like a lot of unnecessary, tedious work.
  2. Use a plotting library to produce SVG, then use JavaScript to support interaction. This seems more manageable, though I do have the following problem: How can I add metadata to the SVG from the plotting library (matplotlib)? This metadata would not be shown when the SVG is displayed, but it would be accessible from JavaScript.

Any advice is much appreciated.

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    Just one thought: If you do hold(True); plot([1,2,3,4], gid='foo'); plot([4,3,2,1], gid='bar'); savefig('foobar.svg'), the resulting file will have elements <g id="foo"> and <g id="bar"> surrounding the two lines, which I imagine you would be able to use from Javascript to manipulate the objects. Jan 25, 2012 at 16:09
  • Hmm, yes this could be a way to add curve-specific metadata. However, I'm looking for a way to add metadata for each point in a curve - essentially a hidden z value. If I can't find another solution, I guess I could throw a big JSON string in the id with all of the metadata that I need.
    – David
    Jan 26, 2012 at 1:19

2 Answers 2

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One way to this can be seen in the matplotlib gallery.

Basically:

  1. In matplotlib, use element.set_gid("youridhere") on the matplotlib element you wish to make interactive. That is, use set_gid() on the output from plot()/hist()/whatever().
  2. Create an svg with matplotlib, but use a StringIO object as your file.
  3. Parse the svg with an xml library (e.g. xml.etree.ElementTree)
  4. Find the xml elements with the id that you set (e.g. "youridhere").
  5. Add onclick/on${theeventyoucareabout} attributes with a javascript function name.
  6. Add a script element with your javascript as a CDATA to the xml tree.
  7. Export the xml to an svg file!
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  • this presumably will introduce a lot of delays .. huge delays and browser crashes, alongside with heavy resource utilization from the server's point of view.
    – khan
    Dec 1, 2012 at 10:46
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    Yes. I wasn't suggesting doing this on-the-fly. The question was to generate an interactive SVG. This will generate an SVG that can be hosted as a static file without any problems.
    – Tim Swast
    Dec 4, 2012 at 21:20
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There is a HTML5 backend: http://code.google.com/p/mplh5canvas/

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    While this link may answer the question, it is better to include the essential parts of the answer here and provide the link for reference. Link-only answers can become invalid if the linked page changes. - From Review
    – Lin Du
    Mar 13 at 2:44

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