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I've been teaching myself D3 in order to experiment with alternative approaches to teaching literature. One of the problems I keep running in to is how to represent time in a literary work to D3. For example, if I'm trying to visualize word frequency in Macbeth, I have time data in the form of Acts/Scenes/Line#, but not dates. Many of the D3 templates are date-centric, which presents a problem for me. Can anyone provide guidance to a novice on this?

A thousand thank yous, Tom

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  • I'm not sure I see how you are going to use "time" exactly. A bubble cloud type chart is often used for this sort of thing. Something like this: vallandingham.me/bubble_cloud
    – reptilicus
    Nov 12, 2014 at 18:41
  • You've likely seen them already, but these come to mind: the Les Miserables interactive; this print graphic visualizing 19 novels. I agree that visualizations of works of literature don't usually call for building precise timelines. Seems like you would want to look more into the qualitative features of d3. Things like d3.scale.ordinal, d3.layout.force, d3.layout.hierarchy.
    – meetamit
    Nov 12, 2014 at 19:51
  • Almost anywhere d3 charts use a date value for the x axis, you can use another quantitative value, such as scene (assuming you have that data). What exact visualization do you have in mind for word frequency? A bar chart for word count per scene? Line chart? Nov 12, 2014 at 21:52

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