Vega is a visualization grammar, a declarative format for creating and saving visualization designs. With Vega you can describe data visualizations in a JSON format, and generate interactive views using either HTML5 Canvas or SVG.
To learn more, visit the wiki.
This repository contains the vega-runtime system, which parses Vega specifications to produce interactive visualizations which run in the browser using a scenegraph-based rendering system.
To run the example tests, you will need to run a local web server. For
example, if you have Python installed on your system, run python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000
in the top-level directory of this repository and then
point your browser to
http://localhost:8000/examples/.
To build the vega-runtime system, run the makefile (make
) within the top
directory. Running the build process is only necessary if you want to modify
the source code and rebuild vega.js.
The JavaScript build process depends on supporting node.js modules. First,
make sure you have node.js and npm (Node Package Manager) installed and
accessible from the command line. Run make install
to install these modules
into a local node_modules folder. The make install command will create the
node_modules folder if it does not exist.
Vega can also be run server-side using node.js. When running in "headless" mode, Vega can be used to render specifications directly to PNG or SVG. In addition to the summary below, see the Headless Mode wiki documentation for more information.
Vega includes two command line tools for converting Vega JSON specifications to rendered PNG or SVG:
- vg2png:
vg2png [-b basedir] vega_json_file [output_png_file]
- vg2svg:
vg2svg [-b basedir] [-h] vega_json_file [output_svg_file]
Within the Vega project directories, you can invoke these utilities using
./bin/vg2png
or ./bin/vg2svg
. If you import Vega using npm, these commands
are accessible either locally (node_modules/.bin/vg2png
) or globally
(vg2png
) depending on how you install the Vega package.
To include Vega in a node project, first install it from the command line
using npm (npm install vega
) or by including "vega"
(version 1.2.0 or
higher) among the dependencies in your package.json file. Then include Vega in
your node.js JavaScript code using require("vega")
.
When running in node.js, Vega can use a "headless" rendering mode for
generating visualizations outside the browser. Internally, Vega uses a custom
view class (vg.headless.View
) for headless rendering. However, most
applications can simply use the convenience method vg.headless.render
.