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The Visual Display of Quantitative Information by
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Demi
is on page 154 of 197
"Color often generates graphical puzzles... the mind's eye does not readily give a visual ordering to colors... Because they do have a natural visual hierarchy, varying shades of gray show varying quantities better than color." shoutout to all my architecture profs who complained about my use of color
— Jan 10, 2019 10:35AM
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Demi
is on page 153 of 197
"... automatic, and implicit - so that the visual image flows right *through* the verbal decoder initially necessary to understand the graphic. As Paul Valery wrote, 'Seeing is forgetting the name of the thing one sees.'"
— Jan 10, 2019 10:34AM
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Demi
is on page 153 of 197
Skimming along but this page really gets me. "A sure sign of a puzzle is that the graphic must be interpreted through a verbal rather than a visual process... Over and over, the viewers must run little phrases through their minds, trying to maintain the right pattern of words to make sense out of the visual montage... by contrast, in a non-puzzle graphic, the translation of visual to verbal is quickly learned...
— Jan 10, 2019 10:33AM
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Demi
is on page 137 of 197
completed "data-maximization" chapter - nice to read through some recommended changes to conventional charts. get a sense of his design thinking and the way to strive for clarity & concision
— Jan 07, 2019 12:05PM
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Demi
is on page 107 of 197
just got to a chapter called "Chartjunk." ha! skimming/skipping because i can get the gist of it just from flipping through the pages. probably the most interesting intersection with architectural drawings (line weights!!! gray grids! the cover graphic of the train timetable looks AMAZING graygridded) - there's even a quote from robert venturi/denise scott brown about the decorated duck.
— Jan 07, 2019 11:53AM
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Demi
is on page 98 of 197
(but also avoid redundancy - within reason! for example, wiping off half of the Chernoff face...)
— Jan 07, 2019 11:47AM
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Demi
is on page 93 of 197
laughed at his "lie factor" ratio earlier, but the "data-ink" ratio is pretty interesting. "above all else show the data", as efficiently as possible
— Jan 07, 2019 11:43AM
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Demi
is on page 87 of 197
just skimmed- "graphical competence demands three quite different skills: the substantive, statistical, and artistic." leaving it to the artist to create statistical graphs is "almost like allowing typographers to control the content, style, and editing of prose. Substantive and quantitative expertise must also participate in the design of data graphics"
— Jan 07, 2019 11:39AM
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Demi
is on page 77 of 197
Chapter on graphical integrity - mostly on how not to lie or be otherwise deceptive with graphical representations. Mostly straightforward - don't represent 1-d data with multiple dimensions, use deflated and standardized units for time-series displays of money, don't quote data out of context...
— Jan 07, 2019 11:37AM
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Demi
is on page 56 of 197
"Tables usually outperform graphics in reporting on small data sets of 20 numbers or less. The special power of graphics comes in the display of large data sets."
— Jan 07, 2019 11:22AM
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Demi
is on page 51 of 197
"Graphical excellence consists of complex ideas communicated with clarity, precision, and efficiency... gives to the viewer the greatest number of ideas in the shortest time with the least ink in the smallest space."
— Jan 07, 2019 11:14AM
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Demi
is on page 51 of 197
Birth of relational graphics in ~1765 by Lambert - seems like a no-brainer, but 2-dimensional graphs...
— Jan 07, 2019 11:14AM
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Demi
is on page 43 of 197
3 examples of successful time/space narratives: Minard's Napoleon march in Russia, McRae's air pollution chart, life cycle of the Japanese beetle
— Jan 07, 2019 11:05AM
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Demi
is on page 36 of 197
EJ Marey's visual time series: horse galloping, starfish turning itself over, gecko, and (my favorite) man in black velvet running
— Jan 07, 2019 10:58AM
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