save plotly plot to local file and insert into html

There is a better alternative as of right now, that is to do offline plotting into a div, rather than a full html.
This solution does not involve any hacks.

If you call:

plotly.offline.plot(data, filename="file.html")

It creates a file named file.html and opens it up in your web browser. However, if you do:

plotly.offline.plot(data, include_plotlyjs=False, output_type="div")

the call will return a string with only the div required to create the data, for example:

<div id="82072c0d-ba8d-4e86-b000-0892be065ca8" style="height: 100%; width: 100%;" class="plotly-graph-div"></div>
<script type="text/javascript">window.PLOTLYENV=window.PLOTLYENV || {};window.PLOTLYENV.BASE_URL="https://plot.ly";Plotly.newPlot("82072c0d-ba8d-4e86-b000-0892be065ca8", 
[{"y": ..bunch of data..., "x": ..lots of data.., {"showlegend": true, "title": "the title", "xaxis": {"zeroline": true, "showline": true}, 
"yaxis": {"zeroline": true, "showline": true, "range": [0, 22.63852380952382]}}, {"linkText": "Export to plot.ly", "showLink": true})</script>

Notice how its just a tiny portion of an html that you are supposed to embed in a bigger page. For that I use a standard template engine like Jinga2.

With this you can create one html page with several charts arranged the way you want, and even return it as a server response to an ajax call, pretty sweet.

Update:

Remember that you’ll need to include the plotly js file for all these charts to work.

You could include

<script src="https://cdn.plot.ly/plotly-latest.min.js"></script> 

just before putting the div you got. If you put this js at the bottom of the page, the charts won’t work.

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