Slankey_Blaseball_Team_Timelines | Blaseball teams over time as a Sankey plot | Data Visualization library
kandi X-RAY | Slankey_Blaseball_Team_Timelines Summary
kandi X-RAY | Slankey_Blaseball_Team_Timelines Summary
A visualiser for Blaseball teams over time as a Sankey plot, using Python, the Plotly library and the SIBR Datablase. This is a tool that uses data from the Society for Internet Blaseball Research's Datablase stack to visualise timelines of players and teams over time. The intent is it should be possible to create views of any team and any time span, in order to entertain, inform and educate people on Blaseball history. It is written in Python 3.9 or so, utilises the Plotly library extensively, has a lil bit of SQL in there to get data out of the Datablase, and is the first coding project I've done that I've ever felt like someone else might be interested in. Accordingly, expect Bad Code and Data Crimes. If you don't know what Blaseball is, my goodness I can't possibly explain here. This video is good: , it's what got me into this colossal but beautiful waste of time and emotional energy. I'm Meserach, because I thought that was cool when I was like 17 and I was too lazy to change it since. There's some chance people may be collaborating on this with me soon, and if they do they should introduce themselves in a new version of this I guess?. You'll need all the dependencies installed first, of course. Right now that's Python 3 ( I'm using the current latest which is 3.9 as of committing ) and the Plotly library ( pip install plotly ). Right now, you need to find the line 153 in "main.py", change the team nickname there to the one you want to see, and then run the code. You can run the code using the command "python main.py" or "py main.py" (depending on your python installation) via command line or run it inside an IDE like PyCharm. If it works the Sankey plot will automatically open in your default browser. The plot displays the lineup, rotation, bullpen and bench of the chosen team over time, including changes to the ordering due to e.g. Reverb. It also shows timelines for any player who has ever been on the chose team, however briefly: their careers outside the team in question are shown as lines at the bottom of the plot. Right now it displays one (1) team, and all the players who have ever been on that team, however briefly. It's also locked at present to display the whole history of the IBL (Internet Blaseball League).
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Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
- Creates a list of nodes that are processed by a season .
- Convert season and day from season and day .
- Gets the unique season and day number for each player .
- Generates a list of eras for the given team and day .
- Helper function to create the x - axis node for a player .
- Convert a season day to a number .
- Processes the game phase information .
- Initialize this campaign .
- Get the absolute day of a season .
- Add a career phase to the history .
Slankey_Blaseball_Team_Timelines Key Features
Slankey_Blaseball_Team_Timelines Examples and Code Snippets
Community Discussions
Trending Discussions on Data Visualization
QUESTION
I have the following network graph:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-30 at 04:35You could just update relations
using complete
, and than filter out the rows where from
is equal to to
, which gives arrows from a node to itself.
QUESTION
I am working with the R programming language.
I generated the following random data set in R and made a plot of these points:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-15 at 17:00You can order your data like so:
QUESTION
I made the following 25 network graphs (all of these graphs are copies for simplicity - in reality, they will all be different):
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-03 at 21:12While my solution isn't exactly what you describe under Option 2
, it is close. We use combineWidgets()
to create a grid with a single column and a row height where one graph covers most of the screen height. We squeeze in a link between each widget instance that scrolls the browser window down to show the following graph when clicked.
Let me know if this is working for you. It should be possible to automatically adjust the row size according to the browser window size. Currently, this depends on the browser window height being around 1000px.
I modified your code for the graph creation slightly and wrapped it in a function. This allows us to create 25 different-looking graphs easily. This way testing the resulting HTML file is more fun! What follows the function definition is the code to create a list
of HTML objects that we then feed into combineWidgets()
.
QUESTION
I am working with the R programming language. I made the following 3 Dimensional Plot using the "plotly" library:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Mar-04 at 17:52You were almost there.
The contours on z
should be defined according to min
-max
values of z
:
QUESTION
I'm trying to build a doughnut chart with rounded edges only on one side. My problem is that I have both sided rounded and not just on the one side. Also can't figure out how to do more foreground arcs not just one.
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-28 at 08:52The documentation states, that the corner radius is applied to both ends of the arc. Additionally, you want the arcs to overlap, which is also not the case.
You can add the one-sided rounded corners the following way:
- Use arcs
arc
with no corner radius for the data. - Add additional
path
objectscorner
just for the rounded corner. These need to be shifted to the end of eacharc
. - Since
corner
has rounded corners on both sides, add aclipPath
that clips half of this arc. TheclipPath
contains apath
for everycorner
. This is essential for arcs smaller than two times the length of the rounded corners. raise
all elements ofcorner
to the front and thensort
them descending by index, so that they overlap the right way.
QUESTION
Over here (Directly Adding Titles and Labels to Visnetwork), I learned how to directly add titles to graphs made using the "visIgraph()" function:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-25 at 10:55Please find below one possible solution.
Reprex
- Your data
QUESTION
In d3
, we may change the order of elements in a selection, for example by using raise
.
Yet, when we rebind the data and use join
, this order is discarded.
This does not happen when we use "the old way" of binding data, using enter
and merge
.
See following fiddle where you can click a circle (for example the blue one) to bring it to front. When you click "redraw", the circles go back to their original z-ordering when using join
, but not when using enter
and merge
.
Can I achive that the circles keep their z-ordering and still use join
?
ANSWER
Answered 2022-Feb-18 at 23:13join
does an implicit order
after merging the enter- and update-selection, see https://github.com/d3/d3-selection/blob/91245ee124ec4dd491e498ecbdc9679d75332b49/src/selection/join.js#L14.
The selection order after the data binding in your example is still red, blue, green even if the document order is changed. So the circles are reordered to the original order using join
.
You can get around that by changing the data binding reflecting the change in the document order. I did that here, by moving the datum of the clicked circle to the end of the data array.
QUESTION
Is there a way to put text along a density line, or for that matter, any path, in ggplot2? By that, I mean either once as a label, in this style of xkcd: 1835, 1950 (middle panel), 1392, or 2234 (middle panel). Alternatively, is there a way to have the line be repeating text, such as this xkcd #930 ? My apologies for all the xkcd, I'm not sure what these styles are called, and it's the only place I can think of that I've seen this before to differentiate areas in this way.
Note: I'm not talking about the hand-drawn xkcd style, nor putting flat labels at the top
I know I can place a straight/flat piece of text, such as via annotate
or geom_text
, but I'm curious about bending such text so it appears to be along the curve of the data.
I'm also curious if there is a name for this style of text-along-line?
Example ggplot2 graph using annotate(...)
:
Above example graph modified with curved text in Inkscape:
Edit: Here's the data for the first two trial runs in March and April, as requested:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Nov-08 at 11:31Great question. I have often thought about this. I don't know of any packages that allow it natively, but it's not terribly difficult to do it yourself, since geom_text
accepts angle
as an aesthetic mapping.
Say we have the following plot:
QUESTION
I do realize this has already been addressed here (e.g., matplotlib loop make subplot for each category, Add a subplot within a figure using a for loop and python/matplotlib). Nevertheless, I hope this question was different.
I have customized plot function pretty-print-confusion-matrix
stackoverflow & github. Which generates below plot
I want to add the above-customized plot in for loop to one single plot as subplots.
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-04 at 09:09Okay so I went through the library's github repository and the issue is that the figure and axes objects are created internally which means that you can't create multiple plots on the same figure. I created a somewhat hacky solution by forking the library. This is the forked library I created to do what you want. And here is a an example piece of code:
QUESTION
I would like to generate a hexagonal lattice heat-map in which each cell represents a group. Likewise, each cell would be a hexagon with a unique color (fill
, set by a column color
in the data-frame) value, and a saturation (alpha
) value corresponding to continuous decimal values from a chemical concentration dateset.
I would like to use a standardized data format which would allow me to quickly construct figures based on standardized datasets containing 25 groups.
For example, a datasheet would look like this:
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-22 at 01:52If you're open to creating the plot in Python, the following approach would work:
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install Slankey_Blaseball_Team_Timelines
You can use Slankey_Blaseball_Team_Timelines like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.
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