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graph
12-04-2014 18:24
StevenBI'm guessing this is a graph of the MSC rankings during qualification matches? Top teams are at the bottom; a team's rank slowly drops, and then jumps every time they win a match. Very interesting, although a little hard to see what's going on...
12-04-2014 19:07
Zebra_Fact_ManTo improve clarity, you might want to invert the y axis and tag each line with its corresponding team # either at the left or right end.
15-04-2014 21:58
orangelight|
I'm guessing this is a graph of the MSC rankings during qualification matches? Top teams are at the bottom; a team's rank slowly drops, and then jumps every time they win a match. Very interesting, although a little hard to see what's going on...
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15-04-2014 22:27
orangelight|
To improve clarity, you might want to invert the y axis and tag each line with its corresponding team # either at the left or right end.
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15-04-2014 22:52
BBray_T1296Where exactly did you get this data? did you log it all yourself, or is there some backlog of match-by-match ranking information somewhere you compiled? It is really cool! It would take forever, but perhaps a 2014 world ranking could be done (all matches everywhere on one giant illegible graph!
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16-04-2014 01:16
StevenB
16-04-2014 15:55
orangelight|
Where exactly did you get this data? did you log it all yourself, or is there some backlog of match-by-match ranking information somewhere you compiled? It is really cool! It would take forever, but perhaps a 2014 world ranking could be done (all matches everywhere on one giant illegible graph!
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16-04-2014 15:58
Basel A
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I'm a fan of Matplotlib, which is a Python library for plotting data. Then if I'm feeling especially perfectionist, I export to SVG and use Inkscape for touching up labels and legends.
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17-04-2014 22:42
orangelightI made a website of it so you can see the ranks easier. You can also click the team on the legend to disable/enable it.
http://orangelight.github.io/graph/