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Data Visualization with D3 and AngularJS

You're reading from   Data Visualization with D3 and AngularJS Build dynamic and interactive visualizations from real-world data with D3 on AngularJS

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784398484
Length 278 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Erik Hanchett Erik Hanchett
Author Profile Icon Erik Hanchett
Erik Hanchett
Christoph Körner Christoph Körner
Author Profile Icon Christoph Körner
Christoph Körner
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Magic of SVG, D3.js, and AngularJS FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Started with D3.js 3. Manipulating Data 4. Building a Chart Directive 5. Loading and Parsing Data 6. Drawing Curves and Shapes 7. Controlling Transitions and Animations 8. Bringing the Chart to Life with Interactions 9. Building a Real-time Visualization to Monitor Server Logs Index

Easy animations with transitions


Transitions are a special kind of animations where solely the change (transition) between two discrete values—so called states—is described. We can simply think of the previous animation example, a 1-dimensional dataset with the values blue and red, where these two values are interpolated during the animation period. In this previous example of the first section, we started from a custom animation and ended up step by step with a transition between these two states:

Transition between two states

In D3.js, we call the .transition() method on a Selection to create a transition object, which is again very similar to a Selection itself. This means that we can apply methods like .attr(), .style(), .delay(), and .duration() on this transition object to create automatically interpolated state transitions. Let's take a look at this in action and see how the previous example looks with the usage of transitions:

var blue =  d3.rgb(0,0,255);
var red = d3.rgb(255,0,0);...
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