1

I'm currently using the whole idea of

var myQuantizeFunction = d3.scale.quantize()
                                 .domain(minMaxFromData) // the minmax using d3.extent
                                 .range(['bla-1', 'bla-2', 'bla-3', 'bla-4', 'bla-5']);

So this works fine when you want to generate a legend across your min-max. The issue is, I have some data which comes back as 0.

Here is an example legend for context :

legend image

As you can see, it's first or lowest value from the range is 0 - 4.7, what I want to really do is have 0 (ie none) as it's own legend item and have everything above ie 1 - 33 in this case as the other ranges.

I want to be able to specify that the first range is 0 and then the domain is split equally between values > 0.

Is there a d3 way of doing this? I'm sure someone else must have had this same problem before, I can't seem to find it but I may not be using the right search terms.

2 Answers 2

2

From the documentation:

quantize.domain([numbers])

If numbers is specified, sets the scale's input domain to the specified two-element array of numbers. If the array contains more than two numbers, only the first and last number are used. If the elements in the given array are not numbers, they will be coerced to numbers; this coercion happens similarly when the scale is called. Thus, a quantize scale can be used to encode any type that can be converted to numbers. If numbers is not specified, returns the scale's current input domain.

As the name suggests d3 is 'data driven' so ignoring parts of your data set is not part of its ethos.

You need to write your own function to generate the [numbers] array.

Try:

data = [0,0,2,1,4,6,7,8,4,3,0,0];

min = undefined;
data.forEach(function (v) {
    if (v > 0) {
        if (typeof(min) === 'undefined') {
            min = v;
        } else if (v < min) {
            min = v;
        }
    }
})

var myQuantizeFunction = d3.scale.quantize()
                                 .domain([min, d3.max(data)])
                                 .range(['bla-1', 'bla-2', 'bla-3', 'bla-4', 'bla-5']);
5
  • My function basically needs to set the min/max to everything MORE THAN 0. So the min needs to be MORE than 0 or whatever the lowest non 0 value in my data is. This looks like something I can do in the d3.extent method.var minMaxFromData = d3.extent(data, function (d) { return d.value; }); Probably modify this to only return when the value is NOT 0.
    – JARRRRG
    Jun 11, 2015 at 13:28
  • 1
    There is a slightly more elegant solution var minMaxFromData = d3.extent(data, function (d) { if (d.value > 0) { return d.value; }});
    – JARRRRG
    Jun 11, 2015 at 13:53
  • This will take into account the numbers which are more than 0 when generating the min/max, However thanks for your help :) I'm getting there. I'll mark your answer as correct still as it does somewhat answer the question.
    – JARRRRG
    Jun 11, 2015 at 13:55
  • You can also use d3.min to get the data minimum Jun 16, 2015 at 12:32
  • @DavidLemon But this would return 0, in the example min is the smallest value greater than 0.
    – thodic
    Jun 16, 2015 at 13:05
1

I improved the latest solution to use d3.min() and added code to the test the quantize function. Also I added a small function to colorize the output.

Everything done in the d3 datadriven way

data = [0,0,2,1,4,6,7,8,4,3,0,0];
range = ['bla-1', 'bla-2', 'bla-3', 'bla-4', 'bla-5'];

//strip the first element
reducedRange = range.slice();
reducedRange.shift();

var myQuantizeFunction = 
    d3.scale.quantize()
      .domain([d3.min(data), d3.max(data)])
      .range(reducedRange);

var filterQuantize = function(d){
  if(d==0){
    return range[0];
  }else{
    return myQuantizeFunction(d);
  }
}

var colorize = d3.scale.category10();
// To test this we will put all the data in paragraphs
d3.select('body').selectAll('p').data(data)  .enter()
  .append('p')
  .text(function(d){return d+':'+filterQuantize(d);})
  .style('color',function(d){return colorize(d)});

View this code runing

Hope this helps, good luck!

Update: I stripped zero out of the scale to treat it as a special case as you pointed in the comment.

3
  • this doesn't help because not only does it return bla-1 for '0' values as expected it also returns bla-1 for '1'. I wanted bla-1 to be for '0' values only and the rest of the bla's to be returned for anything other. I've managed to do this but not in a d3 way, a very manually, array pushing not so neat javascript way. I think I wasn't able to display my question simply enough.
    – JARRRRG
    Jun 16, 2015 at 13:04
  • Now I get it, i don't figure out why you want to strip 0 out of the scale, but you can do it by wraping it around your own function. I have updated the code Jun 16, 2015 at 13:25
  • This is something very similar to what I've done. This actually answers the question directly, so I shall try and tick this as the answer. However OAuth is right in talking about the d3.min also returning 0. My comment needs to be your domain d3.extent(data, function (d) { if (d.value > 0) { return d.value; }}); (Thanks
    – JARRRRG
    Jun 16, 2015 at 13:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.