JamesP Report post Posted February 1, 2007 It would be nice to be able to make much bigger charts. Two features which would enable this would be Zoom and Scrolling. Any chance of these been included in a future release? James Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Pallav Report post Posted February 2, 2007 We've added this to our wish-list for the future releases. However, as of now, I cannot give you a concrete ETA for inclusion of these features. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
easyballs Report post Posted February 26, 2007 Yup. We would really like to see zooming and scrolling/panning, too. This is the only thing holding us back from a full scale fusioncharts implementation. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
FC Fan Report post Posted February 27, 2007 Another suggestion for your customer wish list re: Drag node charts. Is it possible to make sure that the links(lines) between the nodes do not overlap (or at least do not pass underneath another node. Use case: We are trying to construct a process/work flow (something more fancy than a flow chart) but once the number of nodes/flows increases, it is no longer possible to follow visually because the lines go behind other nodes. At the moment it looks like it would be just as easy to achieve this in JS or SVG. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Pallav Report post Posted February 27, 2007 We can place the connectors over nodes - but then it will visually look distorted, as the connectors start from the center of each node. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bbodien Report post Posted January 23, 2008 (edited) Is there any schedule for implementing zooming? The kind of zooming found in Emprise JavaScript Charts would be extremely welcome! See here: http://www.ejschart.com/examples/series/line_series.html Try using the mousewheel while the cursor is over a chart, and dragging an area of the chart to zoom into. EDIT: This would ideally be available across all products, not just FusionGadgets. Edited January 23, 2008 by Guest Share this post Link to post Share on other sites