Example of streamgraph
chart with data tooltip. Streamgraphs are a generalization of stacked area graphs where the baseline is free. By shifting the baseline, it is possible to minimize the change in slope (or “wiggle”) in individual series, thereby making it easier to perceive the thickness of any given layer across the data. Hover on area to see the tooltip with data on the top left corner.
Basic example of waterfall
chart. The waterfall chart is normally used for understanding how an initial value is affected by a series of intermediate positive or negative values. Usually the initial and the final values are represented by whole columns, while the intermediate values are denoted by floating columns. The columns are color-coded for distinguishing between positive and negative values. Axis labels rotated just for fun.
Example of bubble
chart layout. Bubble charts encode data in the area of circles. This type of chart can facilitate the understanding of social, economical, medical, and other scientific relationships. Although less perceptually-accurate than bar charts, they can pack hundreds of values into a small space. Data tooltip is displayed on circle hover.
Treemaps display hierarchical (tree-structured) data as a set of nested rectangles. Each branch of the tree is given a rectangle, which is then tiled with smaller rectangles representing sub-branches. A leaf node's rectangle has an area proportional to a specified dimension on the data. Often the leaf nodes are colored to show a separate dimension of the data.