Reputation: 615
I am new to d3 and trying to figure out how to get a property ("NAME") to show up when hovering over a polygon in a map. I am aware that I should be doing something along the lines of .on("mouseover", function(d,i) { some function that returns properties.NAME }
but can't figure out where to go from there. Here is the js as written, which just statically places the NAME property on each polygon:
<script>
var width = 950,
height = 650;
var projection = d3.geo.albers()
.scale(120000)
.center([22.85, 40.038]);
var path = d3.geo.path()
.projection(projection);
var svg = d3.select("body").append("svg")
.attr("width", width)
.attr("height", height);
d3.json("newnabes.json", function(error, topology) {
var nabes = topojson.object(topology, topology.objects.temp);
svg.selectAll("path")
.data(nabes.geometries)
.enter().append("path")
.attr("d", path);
svg.selectAll(".subunit-label")
.data(nabes.geometries)
.enter().append("text")
.attr("class", function(d) { return "subunit-label " + d.id; })
.attr("transform", function(d) { return "translate(" + path.centroid(d) + ")"; })
.attr("dy", ".35em")
.text(function(d) { return d.properties.NAME; });
});
</script>
Here is a small chunck of the json
{"type":"Topology",
"transform":{
"scale":[0.00003242681758896625,0.000024882264664420337],
"translate":[-75.28010087738252,39.889167081829875]},
"objects":{
"temp":{
"type":"GeometryCollection",
"geometries":[{
"type":"Polygon",
"id":1,
"arcs":[[0,1,2,3,4,5,6]],
"properties":{"NAME":"Haddington"}
},{
"type":"Polygon",
"id":2,
"arcs":[[7,8,9,10,-3,11]],
"properties":{"NAME":"Carroll Park"}
}...
Thanks
Upvotes: 3
Views: 9468
Reputation: 615
So I figured it out, courtesy of: Show data on mouseover of circle
The simplest solution is to just append the names to the svg title attribute:
svg.selectAll("path")
.data(nabes.geometries)
.append("svg:title")
.attr("class", function(d) { return "path " + d.id; })
.attr("transform", function(d) { return "translate(" + path.centroid(d) + ")"; })
.attr("dy", ".35em")
.text(function(d) { return d.properties.NAME; });
Still investigating a more stylish solution to the problem (eg tipsy).
Upvotes: 4