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Create better examples #1
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@jonblower Any idea? I noticed this as a problem repeatedly while showing it to people. The big grid cells look weird for example. |
Barbara is working on a sample flooding dataset that could be useful. And we have some coastal-ocean data, which isn't too big but still looks nice. We'd have to check the licence conditions. Any idea on suitable max size? |
The maximum size should be such that it comfortably fits into a On 18/07/2016 17:26, Jon Blower wrote:
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So I guess that means a 20x20 grid, roughly speaking (sqrt 400)? But for a regular axis grid, you could have as big a grid as you want and it would be the same size in the encoding? Have I misunderstood? |
Sure, but the range values have to be in the document as well. I'd On 18/07/2016 17:55, Jon Blower wrote:
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Right. Hard to make it look "real" with such a small dataset but you could pick a pattern, like concentric circles or an "egg box" pattern. Or take something simpler like a gradient fill and perturb it a little. If you only want a dataset that size then the grid cells are going to appear pretty big on screen. If you want to reduce their geographical extent (to work at local scale rather than continental), you could do something like air quality within a city (but that's likely to be quite noisy), or maybe try to get data on an urban heat island. |
I think 20x20 is enough for a temperature grid of one country. If we On 18/07/2016 23:23, Jon Blower wrote:
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Example coverages should be more meaningful/realistic, but still simple/small.
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