AnyChart
Founded in 2003, AnyChart is one of the global leaders in interactive data visualization, offering award-winning, flexible JavaScript (HTML5) charting libraries with numerous chart types and features, great API and documentation, and enterprise-grade support to help businesses transform operational data into actionable information. Cross-browser JS charts and graphs, maps, stock charts, and Gantt
06/30/2026
The signal is already in the data.
The right viz is what lets you see it ๐
Eight examples worth exploring โคต
We're constantly sifting through new data graphics from around the web. Weekly is where we spotlight the ones that struck us most lately, as strong examples of data visualization in action: for inspiration in your own work, or pure enjoyment if you love a great chart or map.
Here are the eight projects featured across our two latest editions:
๐ Daily Temperatures Against Historical Norms
By Ben Welsh, Casey Miller // Reuters
โณ Sets each day's heat against the 1961โ1990 local norm worldwide
๐ Physical Profile of World Cup Squads
By Alyssa Mungcal, Brandon Kim & team // The Straits Times
โณ Compares player heights across teams, home countries, and positions
๐ Ukrainians in Global Film and TV
By Yevheniia Drozdova // Texty
โณ Surfaces how subtitles have portrayed Ukraine since 1991
๐ Mapping Underground Fungal Networks
By Moritz Stefaner // SPUN
โณ Renders the global density of underground fungal networks in 3D
๐ AI Content Across Creative Fields
By The Economist
โณ Exposes AI's surge across books, music, code, and apps
๐ AI Copyright Lawsuits
By David McCandless // Information Is Beautiful
โณ Links 100+ lawsuits from plaintiffs to the AI firms they sue
๐ Climate Data and Visualizations After Climate.gov
By Climate.us
โณ Revives the shut-down federal climate dashboard independently
๐ Extreme Heat Across Europe
By Lazaro Gamio, Zach Levitt, Erin McCann // The New York Times
โณ Tracks Europe's forecast heat against the local average
Both roundups are on our blog.
Start there, then explore the projects themselves.
We feature fresh standout work like this every week, so stay tuned.
Found or built a visual that lets data really speak?
Send it our way, we'd love to feature it.
05/28/2026
Qlik didn't have it.
We built it for Qlik.
Just released the Circular Dendrogram extension for Qlik Sense, showing a hierarchy as the tree it actually is. Every parent-child relationship is drawn as an edge, fanning out from one center to the leaves on the rim.
Not packed by value like a treemap.
Not stacked in rings like a sunburst.
You read it by following lines, not comparing areas.
The right pick when the question is about shape, not size.
Where it fits:
โ Org charts: divisions down to people
โ Product taxonomies: categories down to SKUs
โ Account hierarchies and cost centers
โ File structures, scientific classifications, anything nested
Qlik has an org chart for top-down structures.
And a network chart for general graphs.
A radial tree was the gap.
Click a leaf and its whole chain back to the root lights up. Wide, deep trees on one screen. And because it is a real Qlik chart, exports, locale formatting, cross-filtering, etc., work out of the box.
See the full announcement on our blog.
It's v1.0. If you try it and something's missing, a layout, a measure mode, an interaction, tell us. That's what we build from.
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