Reputation: 111
I'm having trouble connecting points with a line on a map using d3. I think that I should use d3.svg.line() to create the points - but when I do it, I simply get a very small blob. Please see the link below for a screenshot of what I've been able to accomplish thus far - I want to connect the black dots with a line. Any help would be much appreciated.
var svg = d3.select("body").append("svg")
.attr("width", width + margin.left + margin.right)
.attr("height", height*3 + margin.top + margin.bottom)
.append("g")
.attr("transform", "translate(" + margin.left + "," + margin.top + ")");
var group = svg.selectAll("g")
.data(data)
.enter()
.append("g")
var projection = d3.geo.mercator().scale(5000).translate([-2000,5900])
var path = d3.geo.path().projection(projection)
var graticule = d3.geo.graticule()
var line = d3.svg.line()
.interpolate("linear")
.x(function(d) { d.geometry.coordinates[0]; })
.y(function(d) { return d.geometry.coordinates[1] ; });
// this returns a parse error
// .x(function(d) { return projection(d.geometry.coordinates[0]); })
// .y(function(d) { return projection(d.geometry.coordinates[1]) ; });
var area = group.append("path")
.attr("d", path)
// .attr("d", line(data))
.attr("class", "area")
})
Upvotes: 5
Views: 1885
Reputation: 1467
You have to pass both components of your coordinate to the d3.geo.mercator
object, before taking each one separately as your x and y values. Your 'parse error' should go away if you use
.x(function(d) { return projection([d.lon, d.lat])[0]; })
.y(function(d) { return projection([d.lon, d.lat])[1]; });
instead. This post has a more complete example: D3 map Styling tutorial III: Drawing animated paths.
Hopefully once you are drawing the lines in the correct projection, they'll appear as you expect.
Upvotes: 2