Plot This
One day, I hope someone will turn that chart into a half-day lesson on visualization for Software Carpentry. Before then, though, I have a little visualization challenge that I think some of you might enjoy. This small data set shows population, number of workshop attendees, and number of instructors by country:
Country, Population, Attendees, Instructors Australia, 23737000, 592, 11 Brazil, 203850000, 116, 1 Canada, 35675000, 1215, 46 China, 1368090000, 24, 1 Cyprus, 858000, 25, 0 Denmark, 5655000, 20, 1 France, 66092000, 72, 4 Germany, 80767000, 183, 6 Ghana, 27043000, 24, 0 India, 1266580000, 0, 1 Ireland, 4609000, 0, 1 Israel, 8296000, 0, 1 Italy, 60782000, 81, 1 Japan, 127020000, 0, 1 Jordan, 6688000, 34, 0 Lebanon, 4104000, 25, 0 Netherlands, 16888000, 39, 0 New Zealand, 4560000, 19, 1 Norway, 5156000, 90, 2 Poland, 38496000, 60, 5 Saudi Arabia, 31521000, 20, 0 Singapore, 5469000, 0, 1 South Africa, 54002000, 90, 2 Spain, 46464000, 0, 2 Sweden, 9743000, 54, 3 Switzerland, 8211000, 63, 0 Thailand, 64871000, 0, 1 United Kingdom, 64105000, 1231, 48 United States, 320354000, 5253, 166
I'd like a scatter plot comparing workshop attendees per capita to instructors per capita. This little Python program does that:
import sys import csv import numpy as np from matplotlib import pyplot as plt countries = [] populations = [] attendees = [] instructors = [] with open(sys.argv[1], 'r') as raw: cooked = csv.reader(raw) for (c, p, a, i) in cooked: countries.append(c) populations.append(float(p)) attendees.append(float(a)) instructors.append(float(i)) populations = np.array(populations) / 1e6 attendees = np.array(attendees) / populations instructors = np.array(instructors) / populations plt.scatter(attendees, instructors) plt.xlabel('Attendees per million pop') plt.ylabel('Instructors per million pop') for (label, x, y) in zip(countries, attendees, instructors): plt.annotate(label, xy = (x, y)) plt.show()
(You can download the data and program here and here, and yes, the CSV has all those extra spaces taken out.) The plot produced by this program is:
It's not particularly useful (which is Canadian for "it's awful"): labels overlap, values crowd near the origin, and so on. My challenge to readers is to create something better. More specifically, add a comment to this post with your code (in any language) and a link to the picture it produces, and explain briefly why you think it's better. And while you're thinking about how to do that, have a look at Ned Gulley's In Praise of Tweaking — if there's a way to do for visualization what his programming contest does for performance, I'd like to give it a try.