I should also mention that there is the pivot table view that might
serve well as a dashboard--see Languages vs. Membership in
http://people.csail.mit.edu/dfhuynh/projects/factbook/factbook-people.html
I also did some experiments with Google Charts
http://people.csail.mit.edu/dfhuynh/projects/charts-in-exhibit/charts-in-exhibit.html
David
David Huynh wrote:
> Hi Axel,
>
> That's pretty cool! I'm glad you Mozilla folks are finding our tools
> useful for internal processes.
>
> The content at that URL is indeed missing. For some reason I never got
> around to it.
>
> Regarding "get stuff working deeper", could you elaborate? What do you
> want to happen? I'm not understanding the problem.
>
> As a side note, I got the data link off your exhibit, but it's all on
> one line. So then I copied and pasted the JSON into the left text area of
>
> http://simile.mit.edu/repository/juggler/trunk/src/main/webapp/index.html
> and hit Run, and got a nicely formatted JSON output on the right.
> Juggler is a Javascript-based tool for transforming JSON.
>
> Regarding Mozilla's use of Exhibit, I wonder if there's any value in
> offering Exhibit's faceted browsing features on bookmarks in Firefox and
> on mail messages in Thunderbird. It seems very do-able. What do you think?
>
> David
>
> Axel Hecht wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I just wanted to let the two lists of you know that I did a little
>> cross over, and used Exhibit [1] to get hold of my buildbot builds
>> [2].
>>
>> The actual exhibit is at http://l10n.mozilla.org/~axel/dashboard/.
>> It's based on some manual json files, plus one that is generated by a
>> buildbot status plugin, LatestL10n, the sources of which are at
>> http://hg.mozilla.org/users/axel_mozilla.com/tooling/?file/34a466d5e261/mozilla/tools/buildbotcustom/buildbotcustom/status/l10n.py
>>
>> We're using "the pretty thing" (as Mike Schroepfer calls exhibit) a
>> bit here at Mozilla, and when you have enough data so that you don't
>> know ad-hoc in which way you want to see it, being able to restrict
>> and reorder it in the browser is nice.
>>
>> I do have a exhibit question on this, too. In particular when it comes
>> down to builds, you get a bunch of builds that have common properties,
>> i.e., you get a linux build, windows, mac, possibly for one source
>> stamp. In that sense, I will end up with something like:
>>
>> "de" will be green if
>> - mac build succeeds
>> - linux build succeeds
>> - win build succeeds
>> - tests succeed
>>
>> Oh, and "de" has properties independent of these, like, it's a tier 1 locale.
>>
>> Am I really missing the content at
>> http://simile.mit.edu/wiki/Exhibit/Understanding_Exhibit_JSON_Format
>> or am I just making that up? So far, I managed to aggregate data from
>> multiple sources with multiple types on a single hierarchy, but failed
>> to get stuff working deeper.
>>
>> Axel
>> _______________________________________________
>> General mailing list
>> [email protected]
>> http://simile.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/general
>>
>>
>
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