I used google charts. Not as fancy as D3, but easier. You pass data to the chart API and it does the heavy lifting for you. https://developers.google.com/chart/ -Kelly Zhu Web Services Librarian University of Central Oklahoma -----Original Message----- From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Eric Phetteplace Sent: 2014年9月19日 9:44 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Visualization libraries for lib data I've used D3 to build charts for a similar data dashboard. It's maybe a little less plug-and-play than other charting libraries but has tremendous adoption, is really flexible. http://d3js.org/ Best, Eric On Fri, Sep 19, 2014 at 7:25 AM, Michel, Jason <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > Hello all! > > We're in the process of centralizing all of our disparate data points > (circ, door counts, chat ref, in-person interactions, db stats, > instruction, web analytics, social analytics) into a single DB. We > then plan on building interactive visualizations on top of this data. > > What are some visualization/charting/graphing libraries that would > work for this? We have some ideas but wanted to hear what the c4l had > to say about it. Thanks in advance! > > This is what we have so far (social stats only). We're using chart.js > for > this: > > http://dog.lib.muohio.edu/~jpmichel/apis/stats/ > > > Jason Paul Michel > User Experience Librarian > Miami University Libraries > 513.529.3935 > *[log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>* @jpmichel > <https://twitter.com/jpmichel> > **Bronze+Blue=Green** The University of Central Oklahoma is Bronze, Blue, and Green! Please print this e-mail only if absolutely necessary! **CONFIDENTIALITY** -This e-mail (including any attachments) may contain confidential, proprietary and privileged information. Any unauthorized disclosure or use of this information is prohibited.