Primary sources
Product documentation, pricing pages, release notes, and public terms establish the current baseline.
About the publication
EJS Chart helps developers and small teams compare modern web tools without pretending a recommendation is scientific certainty.
EJS Chart publishes practical comparisons for people choosing modern web tools. Articles synthesize current product documentation, public pricing, change logs, and recurring user-reported patterns. Recommendations are editorial judgments, not laboratory measurements or claims of hands-on testing unless an article explicitly says otherwise.
Product documentation, pricing pages, release notes, and public terms establish the current baseline.
Public user reports are used to identify repeated friction—not as proof of universal experience.
The final recommendation is a judgment shaped by use case, cost, control, and exit risk.
AI supports research and production. Articles do not imply physical testing unless it actually occurred and is stated.
Products change quickly. If a price, feature, or link is stale, email [email protected]. Material corrections should be reflected in the article’s updated date.