I just spent three full days wrestling with the Google Chart API inside a .NET 2.0 web app. What I learned? I have to share — keeping this to myself would be a digital crime. Here’s the hard truth: Google Chart API and .NET 2.0 don’t play nice together. Why? Because .NET 2.0 has zero built-in JSON support , and the Google Chart API lives on JSON. You can probably hack something together with custom parsers or third-party libraries — but if you're on a deadline (like I was), that’s a rabbit hole you don’t want to fall into. But I didn’t walk away empty-handed. The Workaround That Saved Me If you’re stuck maintaining a legacy .NET 2.0 app and need Google Charts today , here’s the least painful path : Pre-render chart URLs server-side using query strings. Yes — old-school, but 100% compatible. Instead of sending JSON payloads, construct the full chart URL manually using the [Image Chart API (deprecated but still functional)](https://developers.go...
I have open a Youtube channel to show my gaming video. Sorry if the video is not great as other gaming videos. This is the education process for me to learn how the streaming and social media platform works in interacting to other human being. Abe Hulk Gaming Site - YouTube