Gina built her own miniature trees to represent real and fake sales over time. Bj’s treemap shows 48 years of Candlelight Processionals. Ben showed US airport business via a jump plot, while John leveraged one for holiday music. Xiaohong showed Madison high and low temps over time in a radial line graph (br!). Lotte’s line graph tracks cookie consumption calories against those burned through daily walks (projected through Christmas!). Wei depicted popular Halloween candy by state in a histomap. In addition to variety in topics and tools, many different types of visuals and encodings were used, too. It’s also awesome to see new names: a number of people mentioned this was their first time participating in the challenge-welcome! I love hearing about people trying new tools, or figuring out how to do something new in one they already use. There were snowflakes, ornaments and many real- and fake!-trees.Ī great variety of tools were put to use this time around: Excel, Tableau, Google Data Studio, PowerBI, PowerPoint, Illustrator, Leaflet, D3, R/ggplot2, and Python/matplotlib. A few dozen people accepted, tracking down data, crafting and sharing creative visualizations on topics like holiday music, cookie calories and winter temperatures. Earlier this month, I put forth a festive challenge: visualize data related to the holidays.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |