Difference between revisions of "Visualizing process data"
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== Software codes for this section == | |||
=== Code to show how to superimpose plots === | |||
[http://www.r-fiddle.org/#/fiddle?id=19PyJkpa&version=1 Try this code in a web-browser] | |||
<syntaxhighlight lang="rsplus"> | |||
# Run this code line-by-line (copy & paste) to understand the demonstration | |||
data <- read.csv('http://openmv.net/file/raw-material-properties.csv') | |||
summary(data) | |||
# Single plot | |||
plot(data$density1) | |||
# Connect the dots | |||
plot(data$density1, type='b') | |||
# Another variable | |||
plot(data$density2, type='b', col="red") | |||
# Superimpose them? | |||
plot(data$density1, type='b', col="blue") | |||
lines(data$density2, type='b', col="red") # where's density2 ? | |||
# Superimpose them: limits | |||
plot(data$density1, type='b', col="blue", ylim=c(10, 45)) | |||
lines(data$density2, type='b', col="red") # now density2 shows up | |||
</syntaxhighlight> |
Revision as of 19:36, 2 January 2016
Learning outcomes
- Understand when it is appropriate to use scatter plots, bar plots, pie charts (hint: almost never), and even tables.
- Learn an interesting, potentially new plot: the box plot, to summarize and compare data.
- How to effectively visualize up to 5 dimensions on a 2-D plot, as shown in a video by Hans Rosling.
- Know the meaning of words like sparklines, data density, and chart junk.
Extended readings
- Sankey diagrams for example, would make a great way to show energy utilization in your company, or even a mass balance superimposed on a flowsheet. Here's a great example applied to the UK energy supply and demand.
- How To Lie With Financial Statistics, Investopedia, November 2011
- 40 years of boxplots
- Why you should never have to use pie charts, an article by Stephen Few.
- This is one video you must watch for the course: Hans Rosling shows an incredible data visualization
Resources
- Class notes 2015
- Class notes 2014
- Textbook, chapter 1
- Quiz and Solution
- Complete steps 1, 2 ... 9 of the software tutorial
Class videos from prior years
Videos from 2015
07:31 | Download video | Download captions | Script |
03:16 | Download video | Download captions | Script |
04:51 | Download video | Download captions | Script |
07:23 | Download video | Download captions | Script |
Videos from 2014
Videos from 2013
Software codes for this section
Code to show how to superimpose plots
Try this code in a web-browser
# Run this code line-by-line (copy & paste) to understand the demonstration
data <- read.csv('http://openmv.net/file/raw-material-properties.csv')
summary(data)
# Single plot
plot(data$density1)
# Connect the dots
plot(data$density1, type='b')
# Another variable
plot(data$density2, type='b', col="red")
# Superimpose them?
plot(data$density1, type='b', col="blue")
lines(data$density2, type='b', col="red") # where's density2 ?
# Superimpose them: limits
plot(data$density1, type='b', col="blue", ylim=c(10, 45))
lines(data$density2, type='b', col="red") # now density2 shows up