Thanks - and great question about direction. My current thinking: Focus on performance-first primitives for the core library. The goal is "make fast charts easy" not "make every chart possible." There are already great libraries for infinite customization (D3, Observable Plot) - but they struggle at scale.
That said, the ECharts-style declarative API is intentionally designed to be "batteries included" for common cases. So it's a balance: the primitives are fast, but you get sensible defaults for the 80% use case without configuring everything. Double y-axis is a great example - that's on the roadmap because it's so common in finance and IoT dashboards. Same with annotations, reference lines, etc. Haven't read the Grammar of Graphics book but it's been on my list - I'll bump it up. And d3-shape is a great reference for the path generation patterns. Thanks for the pointers!
Question: What chart types or customization would be most valuable for your use cases?
Most of my use cases these days are for hobby projects, which I would bucket into the "data science"/"data journalism" category. I think this is the easiest audience to develop for, since people usually don't have any strict disciplinary norms apart from clean and sensible design. I mention double y-axes because in my own past library I stupidly assumed no sensible person would want such a chart -- only to have to rearchitect my rendering engine once I learned it was one of the most popular charts in finance.
That is, you're definitely developing the tool in a direction that I and I think most Hacker News readers will appreciate and it sounds like you're already thinking about some of the most common "extravagances" (annotations, reference lines, double y-axis etc). As OP mentioned, I think there's a big need for more performant client-side graph visualization libraries, but that's really a different project. Last I looked, you're still essentially stuck with graphviz prerendering for large enough graphs...