Comments on: Choropleth Maps – A Guide to Data Classification https://gisgeography.com/choropleth-maps-data-classification/ Geographic Information Systems Sun, 29 Oct 2023 12:39:04 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 By: Roman https://gisgeography.com/choropleth-maps-data-classification/#comment-252169 Tue, 23 Nov 2021 06:29:45 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=11852#comment-252169 Good examples and explanations. Is there a way to create bins that have equal variances? I guess conceptually it would be a bit of a mashup of the quantile and standard deviation methods. Would this method be useful for certain applications?

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By: Sirpa https://gisgeography.com/choropleth-maps-data-classification/#comment-26001 Fri, 14 Dec 2018 08:37:26 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=11852#comment-26001 A clear quide and easy to follow.
One important thing this guide leaves completely out is this: to which class the limit value belongs to?
If the classification is for example
Class 1: 4 – 8
Class 2: 8 – 12
Class 3: 12 – 16
Class 4: 16 – 20
Class 5: 20 – 24
the label claims that value 8 for example belongs both to classes 1 and 2 and missleads the map reader.

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By: Sanjita Dhingra https://gisgeography.com/choropleth-maps-data-classification/#comment-10315 Fri, 20 Apr 2018 04:14:19 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=11852#comment-10315 Very useful, but didn’t understand the standard deviation part. How did you get stand deviation as 3.7? Please explain.

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By: Jocelino Júnior https://gisgeography.com/choropleth-maps-data-classification/#comment-2546 Mon, 30 Oct 2017 12:23:02 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=11852#comment-2546 Great article! Very clear and useful explanations on how to use data classification methods when making choropleths maps and other data-based works. Thank you!

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By: jusTodd https://gisgeography.com/choropleth-maps-data-classification/#comment-2054 Wed, 30 Aug 2017 13:56:26 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=11852#comment-2054 Interesting, but the piece fails to discuss a very important point in classification schemes. From a user perspective, it is always important to remember to classify in a clearly understood format. Use of meaningless percentages have relatively little impact. 13%, 68%, 91% make no statement to the common reader. Conversely, 25%, 50%, 75% are immediately recognized by most individuals and stand out and make a statement.

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By: Nick https://gisgeography.com/choropleth-maps-data-classification/#comment-2027 Sun, 06 Aug 2017 06:55:08 +0000 http://gisgeography.com/?p=11852#comment-2027 On choropleth key, please put the highest values at the top not the bottom. Also, next to each class value put the number of items in each class (n=) so the reader can see the distribution of the data.

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