Enjoy the rest of 2018! I’ll see you in the new year. Next week, we’ll look at a great user chart again. You can find all these big and smaller changes (like updates to line charts and column charts) in our changelog. And only two weeks ago we rolled out a big redesign of our pie & donuts charts introducing two new chart types: “Multiple Pies” and “Multiple Donuts”. We vastly improved your options for uploading and checking data. Our tool got lots of updates in 2018 you can’t see in the chart above: We started in January with the introduction of the River, and, a bit later, a colorblind check. ![]() They already account for 1% of all published charts in 2018.īut this year wasn’t just big in maps for us. Here are some of the advantages great typing and computer skills will bring to your life. And two months later, Hans joined and worked on locator maps, which you can use since October. Typesy is a complete technology learning platform, designed to give you all the skills you need for massive 21st Century success. So even if a map is too niche for Anna to implement for everyone, you can still create a Datawrapper map with it. Then, Ivan built a GeoJSON importer in June. By now, she has increased the number of maps you can find in our map selection for choropleth and symbol maps to over 1,000. In fact, you all published more than double as many maps in 2018 than in 2017. That’s due to three main factors: Our base map editor Anna joined in April. There’s one clear trend visible: The continued rise of maps. ![]() We interrupt our “The best of Datawrapper charts 2018” series (and the free days you might enjoy) for an old tradition: Showing you which chart types y’all published in 2018, and how that has changed to the years before:
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