Claude now creates interactive charts, diagrams and visualizations

Chatty charts are here—fans cheer, skeptics yell “RIP apps,” some users hit errors

TLDR: Claude now draws interactive charts and diagrams right in chat for all users by default. The community is split between hype about fast progress and an AI-first future, frustration over timeouts and flaky Excel hookups, and dev curiosity about how it’s built—equal parts applause, error reports, and speculation.

Claude just learned a flashy new trick: it can now draw interactive charts and diagrams inside your chat—no code, no extra app, just ask and watch it sketch your budget curve or a clickable periodic table. It’s on by default and available to everyone, with tweaks on the fly. Think live visual notes that appear in-line, then evolve or vanish as the convo moves. This follows earlier upgrades like neatly formatted recipes and built‑in weather visuals, plus app hookups to Figma, Canva, and Slack via interactive tools. The hype crowd is loud: one fan called the pace of shipping “absolutely mindblowing,” cheering a world where “PowerPoint is sweating” and “tap-to-explain” replaces long walls of text. But the launch also triggered tech soap opera vibes. Some users claim it broke their chats—timeouts, failed attempts—and one office warrior says the Excel hookup has been failing for months. Meanwhile, devs are poking under the hood, speculating whether it’s built on open tools like json-render or something homegrown. The spiciest hot take? A bold futurist predicts all apps fade away as AI becomes the front door for work—maybe not even needing a screen. Cue the drama: is this the end of apps, or just a cool new graph? Either way, the comments are the real show, with half the crowd yelling “game‑changer” and the rest yelling “fix your timeouts.”

Key Points

  • Claude introduced a beta feature to create interactive charts, diagrams, and visualizations directly within chat responses.
  • These in-line visuals are temporary, appear within the conversation, and can be adjusted as the discussion progresses.
  • The feature differs from artifacts, which are permanent, shareable, and intended as polished outputs in a side panel.
  • Users can request visuals explicitly, and Claude may also decide autonomously when to generate them; examples include compound interest and periodic table visualizations.
  • The update accompanies broader response improvements, including purpose-designed formats and direct interaction with apps like Figma, Canva, and Slack; the feature is on by default and available on all plan types.

Hottest takes

"absolutely mindblowing to witness the rate at which Anthropic can ship new features" — fixxation92
"all apps will disappear and AI will be the entry point for all work" — asim
"Claude is broken for me since this was released" — shiftyck
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