X-Git-Url: https://adrianiainlam.tk/git/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Findex.html;h=c5917cedee136866367fd732a290d21bf8ce71d3;hb=606568fef36a321148399da4c58a05e2753ac2f9;hp=95a9b4077c6e4c6aa4812e16b6882b9dcc47ef09;hpb=5af2de242af305c2d17d5316f52ea7316bad67f3;p=dygraphs.git diff --git a/docs/index.html b/docs/index.html index 95a9b40..c5917ce 100644 --- a/docs/index.html +++ b/docs/index.html @@ -122,7 +122,7 @@
The dygraphs library relies heavily on HTML's <canvas>
tag, which Microsoft Internet Explorer does not support. Fortunately, some clever engineers created the excanvas library, which implements the <canvas>
tag in IE using VML.
The dygraphs library relies heavily on the HTML5 <canvas>
tag, which Microsoft Internet Explorer did not traditionally support. To use Microsoft's native canvas implementation in IE9, you need to set an HTML5 doctype on your page:
You can add IE support to any page using dygraphs by including the following in your page:
++ <!DOCTYPE html> ++ +
When IE9 is in HTML5 mode, dygraphs works just like in other modern browsers.
+ +If you want to support previous versions of Internet Explorer (IE6–IE8), you'll need to include the excanvas library, which emulates the <canvas>
tag using VML. You can add excanvas by including this snippet:
<head> @@ -368,7 +374,7 @@ </head>-
This works quite well in practice. Charts are responsive, even under VML emulation.
+While this sounds like it would be slow, it works well in practice for most charts.
One common gotcha to look out for: make sure you don't have any trailing commas in parameter lists, e.g.