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Yuri Syrovetsky2012-03-13 15:56:54
infographics
Yuri Syrovetsky, 2012-03-13 15:56:54

Statistics collection and visualization server?

Tell me if there is software in nature for collecting and analyzing arbitrary data series.
Example use cases:

  1. Through the web interface or from the command line, I create a session for a data set and remember its identifier. I send from a knee script CSV/JSON/YAML to a special URL with that identifier in one or more requests. After all, I configure column roles, edge values, logarithmic scales, etc. through the same web interface, and the server draws diagrams, quantiles, and other multi-colored things for me.
  2. I send from the CSV script to a special URL. The session will open automatically. I immediately go to the web interface, and the server draws colorful things for me.

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5 answer(s)
A
arree, 2012-03-29
@cblp

github.com/etsy/statsd
The only thing is UDP, so a request will be a little more complicated than a simple curl.

D
dbmaster, 2012-03-13
@dbmaster

www.digmydata.com/guides/settings-spreadsheets/

P
Puma Thailand, 2012-03-13
@opium

In the penultimate podcast of radio-t, they just discussed the implementation of statistics on the protobuff.

M
Muff, 2012-03-14
@Muff

WolframAlpha won't work?

@
@sledopit, 2012-03-29
_

Gnuplot can draw beautiful graphics from the console.
If you search the Internet, then there are a lot of some web interfaces to it, but I didn’t deal with any of them, and therefore I can’t advise anything. This, of course, is not a ready-made solution, you will have to cut decently here, but it will suddenly help.
PS on Habré not so long ago they talked about spark graphics in bash, although this, most likely, will definitely not work (:

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