Book Image

Learn D3.js

By : Helder da Rocha
2 (1)
Book Image

Learn D3.js

2 (1)
By: Helder da Rocha

Overview of this book

This book is a practical hands-on introduction to D3 (Data-driven Documents): the most popular open-source JavaScript library for creating interactive web-based data visualizations. Based entirely on open web standards, D3 provides an integrated collection of tools for efficiently binding data to graphical elements. If you have basic knowledge of HTML, CSS and JavaScript you can use D3.js to create beautiful interactive web-based data visualizations. D3 is not a charting library. It doesn’t contain any pre-defined chart types, but can be used to create whatever visual representations of data you can imagine. The goal of this book is to introduce D3 and provide a learning path so that you obtain a solid understanding of its fundamental concepts, learn to use most of its modules and functions, and gain enough experience to create your own D3 visualizations. You will learn how to create bar, line, pie and scatter charts, trees, dendograms, treemaps, circle packs, chord/ribbon diagrams, sankey diagrams, animated network diagrams, and maps using different geographical projections. Fundamental concepts are explained in each chapter and then applied to a larger example in step-by-step tutorials, complete with full code, from hundreds of examples you can download and run. This book covers D3 version 5 and is based on ES2015 JavaScript.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Text formatting and internationalization

The way numbers are represented internally is seldom useful for human consumption. Large numbers are hard to read, currency is limited to two digits after the decimal point, and simple operations can easily result in undisplayable numbers such as 0.7000000000000001.

Formatting tools allow numbers to be displayed as strings, formatted according to a template. But culture also influences how dates and numbers are represented. Many countries use commas as decimal points, and dots as thousands separators. A date represented as 3/6/2019 may refer to March 6, 2019 or to June 3, 2019, depending on the country where you read it. The d3-format and d3-time-format modules, which are both part of the default bundle, deal with these issues with functions that format and parse dates and numbers by using string templates based on a locale.

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