Back in the day I wrote some sparkline code myself: http://ejohn.org/apps/jspark/
This particular one uses the Canvas element (giving it a nice antialias). My code looks kind of scary, in retrospect, but it seems like it wouldn't be too bad to give it a jQuery facelift. Franck - Doing a quick check to see if the user is using IE, or not, you could be able to use the Canvas element no problem. --John On 10/7/06, Franck Marcia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all, > > I've released a new plugin: sparkline. A sparkline is an inline > graphic > (http://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0001OR&topic_id=1). > > I borrowed the idea (and most of the code) from the TiddlyWiki > project, a very good one-page wiki (http://www.tiddlywiki.com). Thanks > to Jeremy Ruston for his work and his permission. > > Here is the link to the test page: > http://fmarcia.info/jquery/sparkline/sparkline.html > > It's tested successfully on Windows XP with FF1.5.07, IE5.5, IE6, > IE7RC1 and Opera 9.02. However, even if it works fine with FF on > Linux, it doesn't behave correctly with Konqueror. I assume it's the > same with Safari... > > As usual, any comment appreciated. > > Cheers, > > Franck. > > _______________________________________________ > jQuery mailing list > discuss@jquery.com > http://jquery.com/discuss/ > -- John Resig http://ejohn.org/ [EMAIL PROTECTED] _______________________________________________ jQuery mailing list discuss@jquery.com http://jquery.com/discuss/