Book Image

Learning D3.js 5 Mapping - Second Edition

By : Thomas Newton, Oscar Villarreal, Lars Verspohl
Book Image

Learning D3.js 5 Mapping - Second Edition

By: Thomas Newton, Oscar Villarreal, Lars Verspohl

Overview of this book

D3.js is a visualization library used for the creation and control of dynamic and interactive graphical forms. It is a library used to manipulate HTML and SVG documents as well as the Canvas element based on data. Using D3.js, developers can create interactive maps for the web, that look and feel beautiful. This book will show you how build and design maps with D3.js and gives you great insight into projections, colors, and the most appropriate types of map. The book begins by helping you set up all the tools necessary to build visualizations and maps. Then it covers obtaining geographic data, modifying it to your specific needs, visualizing it with augmented data using D3.js. It will further show you how to draw and map with the Canvas API and how to publish your visualization. By the end of this book, you'll be creating maps like the election maps and the kind of infographics you'll find on sites like the New York Times.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
6
Finding and Working with Geographic Data

Creating basic SVG elements

A common operation in D3 is to select a DOM element and append SVG elements. Subsequent calls will then set the SVG attributes, which we learned about in Chapter 2, Creating Images from Simple Text. D3 accomplishes this operation through an easy-to-read, functional syntax called method chaining. Let's walk through a very simple example to illustrate how this is accomplished (go to http://localhost:8080/chapter-3/example-1.html if you have the http-server running):

var svg = d3.select("body") 
    .append("svg") 
    .attr("width", 200) 
    .attr("height", 200) 

First, we select the body tag and append an SVG element to it. This SVG element has a width and height of 200 pixels. We also store the selection in a variable:

svg.append('rect') 
    .attr('x', 10) 
    .attr('y', 10...