X-Git-Url: https://adrianiainlam.tk/git/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Findex.html;h=f86e3092beabc51e3257cd04ed89455ef844252c;hb=61f10b65766cfa6844059a43efb456bb7e91dabb;hp=be7e3ca22464419e50ba06ec2898abc8f97e9170;hpb=f2cfa23b0bb9d33bda9a39036508fe60284a6451;p=dygraphs.git diff --git a/docs/index.html b/docs/index.html index be7e3ca..f86e309 100644 --- a/docs/index.html +++ b/docs/index.html @@ -1,14 +1,29 @@
+(Mouse over to highlight individual values. Click and drag to zoom. Double-click to zoom back out. Change the number and hit enter to adjust the averaging period.)
-In order to keep this example self-contained, the second parameter is raw CSV data. The dygraphs library parses this data (including column headers), resizes the its container to a reasonable default, calculates appropriate axis ranges and tick marks and draws the graph.
+In order to keep this example self-contained, the second parameter is raw CSV data. The dygraphs library parses this data (including column headers), resizes its container to a reasonable default, calculates appropriate axis ranges and tick marks and draws the graph.
In most applications, it makes more sense to include a CSV file instead. If the second parameter to the constructor doesn't contain a newline, it will be interpreted as the path to a CSV file. The Dygraph will perform an XMLHttpRequest to retrieve this file and display the data when it becomes available. Make sure your CSV file is readable and serving from a place that understands XMLHttpRequest's! In particular, you cannot specify a CSV file using "file:///"
. Here's an example: (data from Weather Underground)