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You're reading from  Data Visualization with D3 and AngularJS

Product typeBook
Published inApr 2015
Reading LevelIntermediate
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ISBN-139781784398484
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Erik Hanchett
Erik Hanchett
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Erik Hanchett

Erik Hanchett is a software developer, blogger, and perpetual student who has been writing code for over 10 years. He currently resides in Reno Nevada, with his wife and two kids. He blogs about software development at ProgramWithErik.com. I would like to thank my wife Susan for helping me stay motivated. My friend F.B. Woods for all his help on the English language and Dr. Bret Simmons for teaching me the value of a personal brand. I would also like to thank all my friends and family that encouraged me along the way.
Read more about Erik Hanchett

Christoph Körner
Christoph Körner
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Christoph Körner

Christoph Körner previously worked as a cloud solution architect for Microsoft, specializing in Azure-based big data and machine learning solutions, where he was responsible for designing end-to-end machine learning and data science platforms. He currently works for a large cloud provider on highly scalable distributed in-memory database services. Christoph has authored four books: Deep Learning in the Browser for Bleeding Edge Press, as well as Mastering Azure Machine Learning (first edition), Learning Responsive Data Visualization, and Data Visualization with D3 and AngularJS for Packt Publishing.
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Formatting numbers and dates


In visualizations, we will often be confronted with labeling our data properly and make the values easy to read. Floating point divisions often return ugly and long decimal numbers that do not have to be displayed with the very last position after the decimal point. When displaying time series data, we often want to customize the label captions such that they just display, for example, the current day, month, or year. You will first learn about number formats in D3.js and afterwards take a look at date and time formatting.

Specifying a number format

To create a custom number formatting function—that formats a number to a string—we use the d3.format(specifier) helper function. As an argument, we will specify the format of the output. This will return a custom function that takes the number as an argument and returns the formatted output.

The specifier has the following form:

[[fill]align][sign][symbol][0][width][,][.precision][type]

Normally, we would first define...

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Data Visualization with D3 and AngularJS
Published in: Apr 2015Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781784398484

Authors (2)

author image
Erik Hanchett

Erik Hanchett is a software developer, blogger, and perpetual student who has been writing code for over 10 years. He currently resides in Reno Nevada, with his wife and two kids. He blogs about software development at ProgramWithErik.com. I would like to thank my wife Susan for helping me stay motivated. My friend F.B. Woods for all his help on the English language and Dr. Bret Simmons for teaching me the value of a personal brand. I would also like to thank all my friends and family that encouraged me along the way.
Read more about Erik Hanchett

author image
Christoph Körner

Christoph Körner previously worked as a cloud solution architect for Microsoft, specializing in Azure-based big data and machine learning solutions, where he was responsible for designing end-to-end machine learning and data science platforms. He currently works for a large cloud provider on highly scalable distributed in-memory database services. Christoph has authored four books: Deep Learning in the Browser for Bleeding Edge Press, as well as Mastering Azure Machine Learning (first edition), Learning Responsive Data Visualization, and Data Visualization with D3 and AngularJS for Packt Publishing.
Read more about Christoph Körner