High-performance financial charting library for OHLC data visualization with technical indicators
Project description
PyCharting
High‑performance financial charting library for OHLC data visualization with technical indicators.
Overview
PyCharting lets you render large OHLC time series (hundreds of thousands to millions of candles) in the browser with a single Python call.
It runs a lightweight FastAPI server locally, streams your data to a uPlot-based frontend, and gives you an interactive viewport with overlays and indicator subplots.
Features
- Million‑point OHLC charts: optimized for large numeric indices and dense intraday data.
- Overlays on price: moving averages, EMAs, or any arbitrary overlay series.
- Indicator subplots: RSI-style and stochastic-style oscillators rendered as separate panels.
- Viewport management: server‑side slicing and caching for smooth pan/zoom on huge arrays.
- FastAPI + uPlot stack: Python on the backend, ultra‑light JS on the frontend.
- Simple Python API: one main entry point,
plot(...), plus helpers to manage the server.
Installation
From PyPI
Install the latest released version from PyPI:
pip install pycharting
This will install the pycharting package along with its runtime dependencies (numpy, pandas, fastapi, uvicorn, and friends).
From source
If you want to develop or run against main:
git clone https://github.com/alihaskar/pycharting.git
cd pycharting
pip install -e .
If you use Poetry instead of pip:
git clone https://github.com/alihaskar/pycharting.git
cd pycharting
poetry install
Quick start
The primary API is a single plot function that takes OHLC arrays (plus optional overlays and subplots), starts a local server, and opens your default browser on the interactive chart.
You normally import everything you need like this:
from pycharting import plot, stop_server, get_server_status
When you run this script, PyCharting will:
- spin up a local FastAPI server on an available port,
- register your OHLC series and overlays in a session,
- open your default browser to a minimal full‑page chart UI showing price and overlays.
Overlays vs subplots
Once you have your OHLC series, you pass additional series to plot in two different ways:
overlays = {
"SMA_50": sma(close, 50), # rendered on top of price
"EMA_200": ema(close, 200),
}
subplots = {
"RSI_like": rsi_like_series, # rendered in its own panel below price
"Stoch_like": stoch_series,
}
plot(
index,
open_,
high,
low,
close,
overlays=overlays,
subplots=subplots,
)
- Overlays share the same y‑axis as price and are drawn directly on the candlestick chart (moving averages, bands, signals on price).
- Subplots are stacked independent charts below the main panel with their own y‑scales (oscillators, volume, breadth measures).
See demo.py for a full example that generates synthetic data and wires up both overlays and indicator-style subplots.
Run the demo from the project root:
python demo.py
You should see something similar to the screenshot above: a price panel with overlays, plus RSI-like and stochastic-like subplots underneath.
Python API
The public API is intentionally small and focused. All functions are available from the top-level pycharting package.
plot
from typing import Dict, Any, Optional, Union
import numpy as np
import pandas as pd
from pycharting import plot
ArrayLike = Union[np.ndarray, pd.Series, list]
result: Dict[str, Any] = plot(
index: ArrayLike,
open: ArrayLike,
high: ArrayLike,
low: ArrayLike,
close: ArrayLike,
overlays: Optional[Dict[str, ArrayLike]] = None,
subplots: Optional[Dict[str, ArrayLike]] = None,
session_id: str = "default",
port: Optional[int] = None,
open_browser: bool = True,
server_timeout: float = 2.0,
)
- index: numeric or datetime-like x-axis values (internally treated as numeric indices).
- open/high/low/close: price series of identical length.
- overlays: mapping of overlay name to series (same length as
close), rendered on the main price chart. - subplots: mapping of subplot name to series, rendered as additional charts stacked vertically.
- session_id: identifier for the data session; can be used to host multiple concurrent charts.
- port: optional port override; if
None, PyCharting picks an available port. - open_browser: if
False, you get the URL back inresult["url"]but the browser is not opened automatically.
The returned dict includes:
status:"success"or"error",url: full chart URL (including session query),server_url: base FastAPI server URL,session_id: the session identifier you passed in,data_points: number of OHLC rows,server_running: boolean.
stop_server
from pycharting import stop_server
stop_server()
Stops the active chart server if it is running. This is useful in long‑running processes and demos to clean up after you are done exploring charts.
get_server_status
from pycharting import get_server_status
status = get_server_status()
print(status)
Returns a small dict with:
running: whether the server is alive,server_info: host/port and other metadata if running,active_sessions: number of registered data sessions.
Project structure
The library follows a modern src/ layout:
pycharting/
├── src/
│ ├── core/ # Chart server lifecycle and internals
│ ├── data/ # Data ingestion, validation, and slicing
│ ├── api/ # FastAPI routes and Python API surface
│ └── web/ # Static frontend (HTML + JS for charts)
├── tests/ # Test suite
├── data/ # Sample CSVs and fixtures
└── pyproject.toml # Project configuration
Contributing
Contributions, bug reports, and feature suggestions are welcome. Please open an issue or pull request on GitHub.
Basic workflow:
- Fork the repository.
- Create a feature branch:
git checkout -b feature/my-feature. - Make changes and add tests.
- Run the test suite.
- Open a pull request against
main.
License
PyCharting is licensed under the MIT License.
Links
- PyPI:
https://pypi.org/project/pycharting/ - Source:
https://github.com/alihaskar/pycharting - Issues:
https://github.com/alihaskar/pycharting/issues
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