This website describes the UpSet set visualization technique and collects references to implementations. It also serves as a project page for the original UpSet implementation and it's immediate derivate, UpSet 2.
We encourage contributions in the form of edits or fixes, or, in particular, if you've developed or know of another implementation. Check out how to add an implementation in the UpSet Implementations Readme.
Ideally, you could submit a pull request, but e-mailing alex@sci.utah.edu will also do.
The website is built with Jekyll.
Here is a good cheat sheet: https://gist.github.com/smutnyleszek/9803727
The Liquid Language Reference: https://shopify.github.io/liquid/basics/types/
If you have Ruby on your machine, just install Jekyll and a plugin:
$ gem install jekyll
$ gem install jekyll-redirect-from
Further details on installing Jekyll and its requirements: https://jekyllrb.com/docs/installation/
$ jekyll serve -i
Running Jekyll in incremental (-i
) mode is significantly faster.
$ open http://0.0.0.0:4000/
Installation instructions above for Jekyll will work for the most part, but you can also emulate the current GitHub Pages server environment with the following installation instructions: https://help.github.com/articles/setting-up-your-github-pages-site-locally-with-jekyll/
To install the GitHub Pages gem, you may need to install the Ruby DevKit for your operating system.