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Gallery: Area Profile + Bar chart + Combination chart

3 unique examples
Showing visual types:Bar chart Icon for removing this tagCombination chart Icon for removing this tag Icon for how to create this kind of visualisation
Showing keywords:Area profile Icon for removing this tag

How to create your own

Create your own: combination chart

  • Some combination charts, such as bar and line charts, can be created in standard applications such as Excel (using more than one axis). Others can be combined by saving visualisations as image files and combining in an image editor.

Choropleth map and dashboard

Screenshot for 'Choropleth map and dashboard'
Oldham Neighbourhood Wellbeing Index. A modified traffic light scheme is used in the maps with red - indicating rates ranked in the highest 10% band, amber - the high 11-25% band, light green - the low 11-25% and dark green - indicating rates ranked in the lowest 10%. In maps displaying rates across the four themes, neighbourhoods with rates ranked in the 26-74% band are white, whereas in maps of trends and sudden changes, those neighbourhoods are shaded yellow, whilst those in white show no trend or sudden change. White is also used for neighbourhoods where no persistently high or low rates are detected. It is in this way that the maps themselves act as visual exception reports.
Average rating: 5.6 (5 votes)

Bar line chart

Screenshot for 'Bar line chart'
Chart comparing house prices to income for South East and England over a time period.
Average rating: 2.8 (4 votes)

Gap analysis

Screenshot for 'Gap analysis'
Percentage of 16 year olds achieving 5+ GCSE grades A*-C, comparing Oxford DC and Brighton & Hove UA.
Average rating: 6.3 (4 votes)