Claude AI Now Generates Charts and Diagrams Directly in Conversation

Key Points
- Claude can now create custom charts, diagrams, and visualizations within the chat window.
- Visuals are inserted inline when Claude deems them useful based on conversation context.
- Users may also explicitly request a diagram, table, or chart.
- The feature complements Anthropic's existing "artifacts" side‑panel tools, which remain persistent.
- In‑chat visualizations are temporary and may change or disappear as the conversation progresses.
- Claude’s visual generation rolls out to all users and is turned on by default.
- Similar visual capabilities have recently appeared in OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google Gemini.
Anthropic has updated its Claude chatbot to create custom charts, diagrams, and other visualizations within the chat window. When the system judges a visual to be useful, it inserts the image inline, allowing users to see data and concepts without leaving the conversation. Users can also request visuals directly. The new feature rolls out to all users by default and complements Anthropic’s existing "artifacts" side‑panel tools, which remain persistent. Similar visual capabilities have recently appeared in OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google Gemini, marking a broader shift toward interactive AI‑generated graphics.
Claude Gains In‑Chat Visual Generation
Anthropic announced that its Claude chatbot now supports the creation of custom charts, diagrams, and other visualizations directly within the conversation flow. The system evaluates the context of a user’s query and, when it determines a visual aid would be helpful, inserts an image inline rather than relegating it to a side panel. This enables a more seamless exchange where data and concepts are illustrated without interrupting the dialogue.
Examples provided by Anthropic illustrate how the feature works. In a discussion about the periodic table, Claude can generate an interactive visualization of the table, allowing users to click on individual elements for additional information. In another scenario, a question about how weight travels through a building prompts Claude to produce a visual representation of the structural forces involved. These examples demonstrate the model’s ability to translate abstract queries into concrete visual aids.
While Claude automatically decides when to produce a visualization, users retain the option to request a diagram, table, or chart explicitly. This dual approach ensures that both proactive and reactive visual generation are supported, catering to a wide range of user preferences.
Relationship to Existing Anthropic Features
Claude’s new visual capability builds on Anthropic’s existing "artifacts" feature. Artifacts allow users to create charts, documents, tools, and apps that appear in a side panel, where they can be interacted with, shared, or downloaded. Unlike artifacts, which are persistent across sessions, the in‑chat visualizations are temporary; they may change or disappear as the conversation evolves. Users can still ask Claude to modify these visualizations, providing a dynamic and iterative experience.
Industry Context
The rollout of Claude’s visual generation aligns with similar advancements from other major AI developers. OpenAI recently introduced a feature in ChatGPT that produces interactive visualizations of math and science concepts, while Google Gemini has added the ability to create educational images that users can interact with. These parallel developments suggest a broader industry trend toward embedding richer, visual content within conversational AI tools.
Anthropic’s update is being deployed to all users and is enabled by default, signaling the company’s confidence in the feature’s stability and usefulness. As AI chatbots continue to evolve, the ability to generate real‑time visual aids may become a standard expectation for users seeking deeper insight and more engaging interactions.