tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6140199022860280334.post2171780640742224485..comments2024-03-29T06:37:56.706+00:00Comments on Bob Buzzard Blog: Dojo Charts Part 3 - Stacked Bar ChartsBob Buzzardhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07815472992351343395noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6140199022860280334.post-1874779978258677202011-10-12T09:01:26.542+01:002011-10-12T09:01:26.542+01:00@Chris Bradshaw - yes, Dojo (and other JavaScript ...@Chris Bradshaw - yes, Dojo (and other JavaScript charting libraries) will plot the data that is presented to it, so you would be able to pull this data from multiple objects, and have multiple charts based on different object groups in the same page.<br /><br />The chart wouldn't appear if the page had the renderAs attribute set to PDF, as the chart is generated by client side JavaScript that rewrites the DOM, which isn't possible when a PDF format document is returned. Printing the page to PDF does retain the chart correctly though, in Google Chrome at least.Bob Buzzardhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07815472992351343395noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6140199022860280334.post-55790976604180392612011-10-11T08:39:06.546+01:002011-10-11T08:39:06.546+01:00Just so I am clear in my head on this. SalesForce ...Just so I am clear in my head on this. SalesForce gives us some powerful and configurable reports, but it's weakness has always been the number of objects you can report against in one pass and also the values you can display. Does this mean that Dojo will free us from this constraint if implemented correctly? Also, does it export to PDF using either the built in renderAs="PDF" and the excellent Conga Composer?Chris Bradshawhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10141481090673044802noreply@blogger.com