Book Image

D3.js Quick Start Guide

By : Matthew Huntington
Book Image

D3.js Quick Start Guide

By: Matthew Huntington

Overview of this book

D3.js is a JavaScript library that allows you to create graphs and data visualizations in the browser with HTML, SVG, and CSS. This book will take you from the basics of D3.js, so that you can create your own interactive visualizations, to creating the most common graphs that you will encounter as a developer, scientist, statistician, or data scientist. The book begins with an overview of SVG, the basis for creating two-dimensional graphics in the browser. Once the reader has a firm understanding of SVG, we will tackle the basics of how to use D3.js to connect data to our SVG elements. We will start with a scatter plot that maps run data to circles on a graph, and expand our scatter plot to make it interactive. You will see how you can easily allow the users of your graph to create, edit, and delete run data by simply dragging and clicking the graph. Next, we will explore creating a bar graph, using external data from a mock API. After that, we will explore animations and motion with a bar graph, and use various physics-based forces to create a force-directed graph. Finally, we will look at how to use GeoJSON data to create a map.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

Adding a link to the D3 library

The first thing we want to do is create a basic index.html file:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
    <head>
        <meta charset="utf-8">
        <title></title>
    </head>
    <body>
    </body>
</html>

Now add a link to D3 at the bottom of your <body> tag in index.html. We'll put it at the bottom so that the script loads after all your other HTML elements have loaded into the browser:

<body>    
    <script src="https://d3js.org/d3.v5.min.js"></script>
</body>

Now create app.js in the same folder as your index.html. In it, we will store all of our JS code. For now, just put this code in it to see whether it works:

console.log('this works');
console.log(d3);

Link to it in index.html at the bottom of the <body> tag. Make sure...