![charts ios pod charts ios pod](https://miro.medium.com/max/1400/1*sVJlBpY24nTVMZyFd1JdfA.png)
Try to politely ask in the issues sectionĪdd pod 'Charts' to your Podfile.Please note the difference between installing a compiled framework from CocoaPods or Carthage, and copying the source code.
![charts ios pod charts ios pod](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/66180929/116898466-b207d000-ac36-11eb-8fb6-0a4f229307db.png)
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#Charts ios pod code
The demo project is written in ObjC to demonstrate how it works.Īn amazing feature of this library now, for Android, iOS, tvOS and macOS, is the time it saves you when developing for both platforms, as the learning curve is singleton- it happens only once, and the code stays very similar so developers don't have to go around and re-invent the app to produce the same output with a different library. I've chosen to write it in Swift as it can be highly optimized by the compiler, and can be used in both Swift and ObjC project.
#Charts ios pod android
Okay so there's this beautiful library called MPAndroidChart by Philipp Jahoda which has become very popular amongst Android developers, but there was no decent solution to create charts for iOS. iOS >= 8.0 (Use as an Embedded Framework).Instead, you should go to the release page and pick up whatever suits you. Pods is also now Charts and ChartsRealm, instead of Charts/Core and Charts/Realm One more heads up: As Swift evolves, if you are not using the latest Swift compiler, you shouldn't check out the master branch. Another heads up: ChartsRealm is now in a separate repo. Just a heads up: Charts 3.0 has some breaking changes.
![charts ios pod charts ios pod](https://imgs.developpaper.com/imgs/2018815103141564.gif)
Version 4.0.0, synced to MPAndroidChart #f6a398b