RAWGraphs
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This article, RAWGraphs, has recently been created via the Articles for creation process. Please check to see if the reviewer has accidentally left this template after accepting the draft and take appropriate action as necessary.
Reviewer tools: Inform author |
- Comment: Does not demonstrate WP:SIGCOV in indepdent reliable sources. -Liancetalk/contribs 14:26, 30 September 2021 (UTC)
Original author(s) | Giorgio Caviglia, Michele Mauri, Giorgio Uboldi, Matteo Azzi |
---|---|
Developer(s) | DensityDesign Lab, Studio Calibro, Studio InMagik |
Initial release | 20 April 2013[1] | .
Stable release | 2.0.0-beta11
/ 18 October 2021 |
Repository | |
Written in | Javascript, HTML |
Available in | English |
Type | Visualization |
License | Apache 2 |
Website | rawgraphs |
RAWGraphs is a web-based open-source data visualization software made in JavaScript. It employs D3.js for the creation of editable visualizations in SVG format.
History
The project was started in 2013 by a group of researchers of Politecnico di Milano[2][3] with the original name of "RAW". Version 1.0.0 was released in 2014. In the same year the tool won the "Most Beautiful" award at the Kantar Information is Beautiful Awards 2014 organized by David McCandless.[4]
In 2017 the project was re-launched thanks to private support[5]. It changed the license from LGPL to Apache 2 and the project name to "RAWGraphs".
In August 2019 the team launched a crowdfunding campaign to harvest economical support for developing a new version of the tool. Version 2.0.0 was released in September 2020 to backers, and publicly in February 2021[6] . The new version presents a modular architecture composed by a core Javascript library, an expandable library of visual models, and a web-based GUI written in React.
Applications
RAWGraphs has been used in a number of research projects in academia[7], and is used also by journalist[8] and graphic designer thanks to its ability of creating clean, SVG-based images that can be further edited with any other software.
Available charts
In version 2.0 the available charts are:
- Alluvial diagram
- Arc diagram
- Bar chart
- Beeswarm plot
- Box plot
- Bumpchart
- Circle packing
- Dendrograms:
- Gantt chart
- Horizon graph
- Line chart
- Matrix Plot
- Parallel coordinates
- Radar chart
- Sankey diagram
- Scatterplots:
- Bubble chart
- Contour plot over bubble chart
- Convex hull grouping
- Hexagonal binning grouping
- Streamgraph (also known as Area chart)
- Sunburst diagram
- Treemap
- Violin plot
- Voronoi Diagram
Data Inputs
the software can load data from the following sources:
- static files (CSV, TSV, Excel files)
- Data from endpoints (in tabular or JSON format)
- Data from SPARQL endpoints (e.g. Wikidata)
References
- ^ https://github.com/densitydesign/raw/releases/tag/v.0.1.1 RAWGraphs version 0.6a1 release date
- ^ Mauri, Michele; Elli, Tommaso; Caviglia, Giorgio; Uboldi, Giorgio; Azzi, Matteo (2017). "RAWGraphs: A Visualisation Platform to Create Open Outputs". Proceedings of the 12th Biannual Conference on Italian SIGCHI Chapter. ACM: 28:1--28:5. doi:10.1145/3125571.3125585. ISBN 978-1-4503-5237-6.
- ^ Bryan Connor, "Add Raw to Your Roster of Visualization Tools", The Why Axis, retrieved 2021-10-14
- ^ "Most Beautiful Award in 2014", Information is Beautiful Awards, retrieved 2021-08-21
- ^ Enrico Bertini, Moritz Stefaner, "Visualizing Data with RAW", Data Stories, retrieved 2021-10-14
- ^ Nathan Yau, "RAWGraphs 2.0, an open-source tool to visualize data", FlowingData, retrieved 2021-08-17
- ^ Academic papers citing RAWGraphs, Scopus, retrieved 2021-08-17
- ^ Rowan, Philp, My Favorite Tools: Alberto Cairo on Data Visualization, Global Investigative Journalism Network, retrieved 2021-08-27
Category:Free application software Category:Free data visualization software
Dear reviewers, to fully disclose my role I am one of the creators of the described open source software. I wrote the article since it has a quite large user base and they would be interested in the topic, and due the fact that some other similar softwares (e.g. Gephi, Plotly) have an article. I wrote the article trying to keep the most neutral point of view. Any suggestion is welcome. --Sette-quattro (talk) 09:53, 29 September 2021 (UTC)