Output ====== pygal can generate multiple output formats. SVG --- String ~~~~~~ The obvious output is the vectorial output in svg format: .. code-block:: python chart = pygal.Line() ... chart.render() # Return the svg as bytes It can be rendered as unicode when specifying ``is_unicode=True`` or when ``disable_xml_declaration`` is used .. code-block:: python chart = pygal.Line() ... chart.render(is_unicode=True) # Return the svg as a unicode string File ~~~~ You can also write the chart to a file using ``render_to_file``: .. code-block:: python chart = pygal.Line() ... chart.render_to_file('/tmp/chart.svg') # Write the chart in the specified file PNG --- With cairosvg installed you can directly get the png file using ``render_to_png``: .. code-block:: python chart = pygal.Line() ... chart.render_to_png('/tmp/chart.png') # Write the chart in the specified file Etree ----- It is possible to get the xml etree root element of the chart (or lxml etree node if lxml is installed) by calling the ``render_tree`` method: .. code-block:: python chart = pygal.Line() ... chart.render_tree() # Return the svg root etree node Browser ------- With lxml installed you can use the ``render_in_browser`` method to magically make your chart appear in you default browser. .. code-block:: python chart = pygal.Line() ... chart.render_in_browser() PyQuery ------- If pyquery is installed you can get the pyquery object wrapping the chart by calling ``render_pyquery``: (This is mainly used for testing) .. code-block:: python chart = pygal.Line() ... chart.render_pyquery() # Return pyquery object Flask response -------------- If you are using pygal in a flask app the ``render_response`` may come in handy: .. code-block:: python @app.route('/charts/line.svg') def line_route(): chart = pygal.Line() ... return chart.render_response() Django response --------------- Same thing for django with ``render_django_response``.