Charts studio
Charts
Create beautiful, interactive charts and visualizations with our D3.js-powered tools. Build Gantt charts for project management, generate charts from JSON data, or use our property builder to create custom visualizations. All charts can be shared and exported for presentations and reports.
Available Charts (8)
Gantt Chart Generator
Create interactive Gantt charts for project management
Bar Chart Generator
Create interactive bar charts from your data
Line Chart Generator
Create interactive line charts to show trends over time
Pie Chart Generator
Create interactive pie charts to show proportional data
Scatter Chart Generator
Create scatter plots to show correlations between variables
Area Chart Generator
Create area charts to show cumulative data over time
Sunburst Chart Generator
Create hierarchical sunburst charts to visualize nested data structures
USA Map Visualizer
Create interactive choropleth maps of the United States with state-level data
Why Use Our Charts?
Introduction
- Chart builders for pie, bar, line, area, scatter, Gantt, sunburst, and map visualizations.
- Simplified inputs with live previews so non-designers can validate before sharing.
- Supports JSON imports to reduce copy/paste errors and speed up data shaping.
- Output tuned for presentations and reports with clear legends and labels.
When to Use
- Pie/Bar/Line/Area for comparisons, trends, and part-to-whole storytelling.
- Scatter for correlation checks; Sunburst for hierarchies; USA Map for geo reporting.
- Gantt for project timelines, dependencies, and resource views.
- Use when you need exportable visuals quickly without standing up BI tooling.
How to Choose the Right Chart
- Use bar for category comparisons; line/area for time series; pie only for a few slices.
- Scatter if you need to see relationships between two variables; add trendlines sparingly.
- Sunburst for hierarchical drill-down; map for region-specific summaries.
- Gantt when sequencing and durations matter; avoid pies for timelines.
Tips for Better Results
- Limit colors and label clutter—aim for readability on mobile and slides.
- Sort categories logically (by value or name) to reduce cognitive load.
- Include units and time zones in tooltips or labels to avoid confusion.
- Export and test in your slide deck or doc to confirm sizing and legibility.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Using pies with too many slices; switch to bar/column when categories exceed a handful.
- Skipping units and time zones, which makes values ambiguous; label axes and tooltips clearly.
- Choosing the wrong chart type (e.g., line for categorical data); match type to data shape.
- Leaving categories unsorted, making comparisons harder; sort by value or alphabetically.
- Overloading charts with effects or colors that reduce clarity on mobile or projectors.
