tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-279772059074318326.post6481046188502013152..comments2023-12-30T11:14:38.564-08:00Comments on D3.js Tips and Tricks: Formatting a date / time axis with specified value in v4D3 Noobhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00927635217604611354noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-279772059074318326.post-27412309751839570642016-09-30T19:51:28.064-07:002016-09-30T19:51:28.064-07:00Hey, didn't find any way to contact you, but j...Hey, didn't find any way to contact you, but just wanted to write up this to thank you as this series of tutorials and examples helped me to go through and understand d3.js in under just two days :)<br /><br />Used your example for gradient-filled areas and tweaked it around to "slope" the graph once data finishes to the end of the domain, giving a nicer look to graphs in which data is incomplete and does not reach out the full domain (i.e.: I have to show a full range of days in a graph, but I want all the remaining days that are not filled out to be sloped downwards to the end of the graph).<br /><br />Worked around this by applying a quadratic polynomial which passes through a point A (end of graph data) to a vertex V (end of domain and interception of abscises at y=0). Demo can be found here: http://jsfiddle.net/rtroncoso/v94zd6g3/12/.<br /><br />Feel free to look around, maybe it can help someone who's gone through the same problem and needs assistance with it. Keep it up with the good work, cheers!Rodrigo Troncosohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14397768224055470559noreply@blogger.com