• Eheran@lemmy.world
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    20 days ago

    The color grading of the years is really bad. The last 20/30 years are all very low in contrast compared to each other, while 1940s and 60s are easy to tell apart, where it is least important. There are so many more colors than yellow/orange/brown, we can use them to get more information density.

    • BigDanishGuy@sh.itjust.works
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      20 days ago

      Making data beautiful is what this community is about. But compromising readability for a color scheme is just annoying. Present data first, worry about it being extra pretty second.

      We’re already looking at time being encoded differently than the usual horizontal axis, don’t make it harder.

      On the other hand, if the purpose of the graph isn’t to present individual data points, but to present the monthly trends, then maybe it would have been OK, if the last 3 decades could have started over with a higher luminance set of colors. IDK but I think I would have used colors with more contrast and dropped the warm earthy theme.

    • wischi@programming.dev
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      19 days ago

      Quite the contrary. I have a red-green deficiency (and so do about 6% of men). Viridis Color scale is pretty nice but two much colors are hard to read for a lot of people

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          Actually, that’s a feature that was common going all the way back to the very earliest image file formats: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indexed_color

          It’d be easy enough to make the chart a plain old GIF or indexed PNG; the only non-trivial part is that you’d need add some code to the page it’s embedded in to swap out the color palette. (You could also make it an SVG and manipulate it even more easily using the DOM.)

          • Dark Arc@social.packetloss.gg
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            16 days ago

            Well, the image format is based on indexed color for compression purposes … But it’s not like it calls out “these indexes should be customizable”.