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Beer I've Been Drinking

Learn dc.js, Crossfilter, and Leaflet by visualizing my Untappd check-ins

Demo

Try out the demo here

Demo screenshot

Tutorial

Have you ever wished you could make a decent looking web-based data visualization? Maybe you're a UI/UX designer who wants to get beyond static wireframes, a graduate student who wants to impress your advising professor and research team, or an MBA who wants to go beyond Excel charts. This tutorial is for you.

I assume only rudimentary knowledge of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. We'll start with the HTML & CSS, but if you want to skip down to the fun JavaScript stuff go right ahead.

Tools

We'll use CSS and HTML to position and style the data visualization. Instead of starting from scratch, let's leverage Bootstrap's existing stylesheets and methodology to get a decent looking website in a short amount of time.

dc.js is a great JavaScript library that we'll use to create interactive charts and a corresponding table. It's built upon d3 and crossfilter, helps us to build simple charts quickly, and looks pretty good right out of the box.

Leaflet will be used to create an interactive map. Leaflet is easy to use and plays nicely with Mapbox tiles, which are a customizable and fun alternative to using Google Maps.

Data

The visualization will use my actual Untappd check-in data. I downloaded my beer drinking history via the Untappd API and put it into a JSON file that you can access here.

JSON screenshot

Try it yourself

If you want to play with the code as we go, I recommend downloading the source code from this GitHub repository, navigating to the directory where the files are located, and kicking off Python's SimpleHTTP server so that you can see your visualization in your own browser at http://localhost:8000 (If this is new for you, see this link for a bit more information).

In the terminal, navigate to the correct location and run the python server Terminal screenshot

The demo will then be accessible in a browser at localhost:8000 Running on localhost

HTML & CSS

The .css files can be found in the css folder. In addition to the Bootstrap stylesheet, dc and leaflet come with their own default style sheets that we'll include as well. Finally, we have our own CSS file main.css for the little styling tweaks we'll make.

Let's start writing some HTML to include those CSS files. In index.html we add the following:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
    <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
    <title>dc.js example - Untappd Data Visualization</title>
    <meta charset="UTF-8">
    <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="css/dc.css">
    <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="css/leaflet.css">
    <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="css/bootstrap.css">
    <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="css/main.css">
</head>

Next, we'll add all of the HTML scaffolding, adhering to the Bootstrap grid system.

Tiny Bootstrap Grid Tutorial

Skip this if you already grok Bootstrap

If you've never seen Bootstrap before, here's a brief summary of how it's grid layouts work.

In this "grid" way of doing things, we simply think of positioning our elements one row at a time, where each row can be divvied up into 12 columns. So if you want to put 3 equally spaced items in a row, you just give each item a width of 4 columns.

<div class="container">
  <div class="row">
    <div class="col-md-4">
      Item 1
    </div>
    <div class="col-md-4">
      Item 2
    </div>
    <div class="col-md-4">
      Item 3
    </div>
  </div>
</div>

You can think of the grid system as a spreadsheet, so the HTML we just wrote would look like: Spreadsheet grid layout

Why col-md-4 instead of col-4? What's the "md" all about? It has to do with responsive layouts, and "md" stands for medium. Check the docs for more info.

Here ends the tiny grid tutorial.

HTML Scaffolding

To achieve our final layout we will create four rows. The first is for our header, the next is the row of pie charts and the map, the third row is for the bar charts, and the final row is for the table. In each row we space things accordingly by choosing particular column widths.

For illustration, this photo (forgive the lines that aren't at right angles) shows where the rows are separated using teal lines and the column widths using gray lines. As you can see, the second row uses 2 column widths for each pie chart and the remaining 6 columns for the map.

Rows and columns

In the "spreadsheet" analogy, this layout would look like this: Spreadsheet layout

Below is all of the scaffolding HTML code. Notice the row and column spacing. (There's a bit more in here too related to charts that we'll get into later.)

<div class="container-fluid">
  <div class="row">
    <div class="col-xs-12 dc-data-count dc-chart" id="data-count">
      <h2>Beer History
        <small>
          <span class="filter-count"></span> selected out of <span class="total-count"></span> records |
           <a id="all" href="#">Reset All</a>
          </span>
        </small>
      </h1>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="row" id="control-row">
    <div class="col-xs-2 pie-chart">
      <h4>Year <small><a id="year">reset</a></small></h4>
      <div class="dc-chart" id="chart-ring-year"></div>
    </div>
    <div class="col-xs-2 pie-chart">
      <h4>Month <small><a id="month" href="#">reset</a></small></h4>
      <div class="dc-chart" id="chart-ring-month"></div>
    </div>
    <div class="col-xs-2 pie-chart">
      <h4>Day <small><a id="day">reset</a></small></h4>
      <div id="chart-ring-day" class="dc-chart"></div>
    </div>
    <div class="col-xs-6">
      <h4>Breweries</h4>
      <div id="map"></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="row">
    <div class="col-xs-6 col-md-3">
      <div class="dc-chart" id="chart-rating-count"></div>
    </div>
    <div class="col-xs-6 col-md-3">
      <div class="dc-chart" id="chart-community-rating-count"></div>
    </div>
    <div class="col-xs-6 col-md-3">
      <div class="dc-chart" id="chart-abv-count"></div>
    </div>
    <div class="col-xs-6 col-md-3">
      <div class="dc-chart" id="chart-ibu-count"></div>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="row">
    <div class="col-xs-12">
      <table class="table table-bordered table-striped" id="data-table">
        <thead>
          <tr class="header">
            <th>Brewery</th>
            <th>Beer</th>
            <th>Style</th>
            <th>My Rating</th>
            <th>Community Rating</th>
            <th>ABV %</th>
            <th>IBU</th>
          </tr>
        </thead>
      </table>
    </div>
  </div>
</div>

JavaScript

Finally! Time for the interesting parts.

First we include a couple of JavaScript libraries and then start writing custom code. I'll skip the map code right now and start with dc.js related code.

<script type="text/javascript" src="js/d3.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/crossfilter.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/dc.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/leaflet.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="js/underscore-min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">

Underscore is by no means necessary but I wanted to be the first to introduce you to it if you've never seen it before. Go read about it. It's very useful.

Parsing data

We begin by reading all of the JSON data from untappd.json using d3.json. Before setting up any of the charting code, we preprocess the data we've read so that it's in the format dc.js expects. We convert string representation of numbers into actual numbers using the + operator like this d.count = +d.count. We also round particular pieces of data to the nearest 0.25, 0.5, or 10 to make the bar charts look better; we are basically forcing the data into bins of a particular width. Finally, we use d3.time.format to pluck the values we care about (month, day, etc) out of JavaScript Date objects.

d3.json('untappd.json', function (error, data) {
  var beerData = data.response.beers.items;

  var fullDateFormat = d3.time.format('%a, %d %b %Y %X %Z');
  var yearFormat = d3.time.format('%Y');
  var monthFormat = d3.time.format('%b');
  var dayOfWeekFormat = d3.time.format('%a');

  // normalize/parse data so dc can correctly sort & bin them
  beerData.forEach(function(d) {
    d.count = +d.count;
    // round to nearest 0.25
    d.rating_score = Math.round(+d.rating_score * 4) / 4;
    d.beer.rating_score = Math.round(+d.beer.rating_score *4) / 4;
    // round to nearest 0.5
    d.beer.beer_abv = Math.round(+d.beer.beer_abv * 2) / 2;
    // round to nearest 10
    d.beer.beer_ibu = Math.floor(+d.beer.beer_ibu / 10) * 10;
    d.first_had_dt = fullDateFormat.parse(d.first_had);
    d.first_had_year = +yearFormat(d.first_had_dt);
    d.first_had_month = monthFormat(d.first_had_dt);
    d.first_had_day = dayOfWeekFormat(d.first_had_dt);
  });

Crossfilter

Crossfilter is the workhorse of the visualization. It does all of the grouping, aggregating, and filtering for us and it does it all very quickly. Here's a nice introduction to bring you up to speed.

Now that we've cleaned up our data, we instantiate crossfilter and give it our data.

var ndx = crossfilter(beerData);

Dimensions

Next, we'll set up all of the dimensions. I think of these in my head as a list of x-axis values

var yearDim  = ndx.dimension(function(d) {return d.first_had_year;}),
    // dc.pluck: short-hand for same kind of anonymous function we used for yearDim
    monthDim  = ndx.dimension(dc.pluck('first_had_month')),
    dayOfWeekDim = ndx.dimension(dc.pluck('first_had_day')),
    ratingDim = ndx.dimension(dc.pluck('rating_score')),
    commRatingDim = ndx.dimension(function(d) {return d.beer.rating_score;}),
    abvDim = ndx.dimension(function(d) {return d.beer.beer_abv;}),
    ibuDim = ndx.dimension(function(d) {return d.beer.beer_ibu;}),
    allDim = ndx.dimension(function(d) {return d;});

Take the rating dimension as an example. When we use this dimension to create the chart, what we're doing is saying "for every item in our beer data, return the rating score as the x value for this particular dimension". Notice that dc has a function pluck to make this less verbose.

Now how to get the corresponding y-values for each dimension?

Groups

Groups take a dimension value as input and return an output value; they are the mechanism by which you get a y-value for a particular x-value. If you're familiar with the map-reduce programming paradigm, that's what this basically is.

For each dimension in this simple visualization we are just plotting the number of occurences on the y-axis, i.e. the number of 8% ABV beers I've had. Counting the number of occurences is a very common thing to do so crossfilter has a built in function we'll use called reduceCount.

  var all = ndx.groupAll();
  var countPerYear = yearDim.group().reduceCount(),
      countPerMonth = monthDim.group().reduceCount(),
      countPerDay = dayOfWeekDim.group().reduceCount(),
      countPerRating = ratingDim.group().reduceCount(),
      countPerCommRating = commRatingDim.group().reduceCount(),
      countPerABV = abvDim.group().reduceCount(),
      countPerIBU = ibuDim.group().reduceCount();

reduceCount is actually just a shorthand for the more flexible reduce. reduce takes three parameters that tell crossfilter what to do whenever the group is filtered. Specifically, what to do when data is added, removed, and when the group is initialized. A concrete example - in the ABV chart, if you zoom in to see only the 8% ABV beers, the crossfilter group needs to know how to remove the 5%, 6%, 7%, 9%, ... values.

So using reduce, we would implement countPerABV as follows:

var countPerABV = abvDim.group().reduce(
  function reduceAdd(p, v) {
    return p + 1;
  },
  function reduceRemove(p, v) {
    return p - 1;
  },
  function reduceInitial() {
    return 0;
  }
);

See the annotated source of dc.js' canonical example for advanced usage of reduce.

If you want to compute any functions for a particular dimension like mean or standard deviation, you would need to use this reduce pattern. Or you could just use Reductio, a library that makes Crossfilter grouping easier and comes with implementations for common grouping functions like standard deviation.

Charts

The first thing we'll do is create all of the dc chart objects. As we instantiate each chart object we'll pass in the CSS selector of the corresponding HTML element that the chart will be drawn in.

var yearChart   = dc.pieChart('#chart-ring-year'),
    monthChart   = dc.pieChart('#chart-ring-month'),
    dayChart   = dc.pieChart('#chart-ring-day'),
    ratingCountChart  = dc.barChart('#chart-rating-count'),
    commRatingCountChart  = dc.barChart('#chart-community-rating-count'),
    abvCountChart  = dc.barChart('#chart-abv-count'),
    ibuCountChart  = dc.barChart('#chart-ibu-count'),
    dataCount = dc.dataCount('#data-count')
    dataTable = dc.dataTable('#data-table');

Now we'll start configuring each individual chart, defining things like width and height of the chart as well as associating each chart with particular a dimension and group.

Year Chart

First we'll define the pie chart that will double as the control for filter all of the data by year. We've already positioned it via HTML to be the leftmost element in the second row.

yearChart
    .width(150)
    .height(150)
    .dimension(yearDim)
    .group(countPerYear)
    .innerRadius(20);

Here we see the beauty of dc shine through in this very straightforward definition. We use the year dimension and the count-per-year group to define the data that drives the pie chart. Finally we set a bit of aesthetics via the innerRadius method.

Month Chart

The month chart configuration is almost identical to the year chart, but also passes a custom ordering function to ordering that instructs dc how to order the months when creating the pie chart.

monthChart
    .width(150)
    .height(150)
    .dimension(monthDim)
    .group(countPerMonth)
    .innerRadius(20)
    .ordering(function (d) {
      var order = {
        'Jan': 1, 'Feb': 2, 'Mar': 3, 'Apr': 4,
        'May': 5, 'Jun': 6, 'Jul': 7, 'Aug': 8,
        'Sep': 9, 'Oct': 10, 'Nov': 11, 'Dec': 12
      };
      return order[d.key];
    });

Without the custom ordering function, the month and day charts are sorted in alphabetical order as you move clockwise. Out-of-order controls The year pie chart is already correctly sorted because we cast the year string to a number earlier when we parsed the data: d.first_had_year = +yearFormat(d.first_had_dt);

Day of the Week Chart

The day of the week pie chart is just like the month chart, except that the custom ordering function is updated accordingly.

dayChart
    .width(150)
    .height(150)
    .dimension(dayOfWeekDim)
    .group(countPerDay)
    .innerRadius(20)
    .ordering(function (d) {
      var order = {
        'Mon': 0, 'Tue': 1, 'Wed': 2, 'Thu': 3,
        'Fri': 4, 'Sat': 5, 'Sun': 6
      }
      return order[d.key];
    }
   );

Map

The next element in this row of HTML is the map, but let's stick with dc.js right now and move on to the row of bar charts.

Bar Charts

The bar charts are nearly identical in their configuration. We'll start with the chart that depicts the count of beers for each of my ratings.

  ratingCountChart
      .width(300)
      .height(180)
      .dimension(ratingDim)
      .group(countPerRating)
      .x(d3.scale.linear().domain([0,5.2]))
      .elasticY(true)
      .centerBar(true)
      .barPadding(5)
      .xAxisLabel('My rating')
      .yAxisLabel('Count')
      .margins({top: 10, right: 20, bottom: 50, left: 50});
  ratingCountChart.xAxis().tickValues([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);

This chart definition is a bit more verbose than the pie chart. We set the width, height, dimension, and group as usual. Then we tell dc what to use for the x-axis scale by using a d3 quantitative scale with an input domain from 0 to 5.2. The rating data only ranges from 0 to 5, but the chart looks a little nicer if we set the range to be just a bit beyond 0 to 5. The rest of the methods are just aesthetics, and the fastest way to understand them is to just play with them - change the inputs and see what happens. elasticY tells the chart whether it should resize the y axis when data is filtered, the rest do what they say (center the bar, etc).

The next chart is the count of beers I've checked in grouped by the average community rating for that beer. This chart is the essentially the same as the previous chart.

commRatingCountChart
    .width(300)
    .height(180)
    .dimension(commRatingDim)
    .group(countPerCommRating)
    .x(d3.scale.linear().domain([0,5.2]))
    .elasticY(true)
    .centerBar(true)
    .barPadding(5)
    .xAxisLabel('Community rating')
    .yAxisLabel('Count')
    .margins({top: 10, right: 20, bottom: 50, left: 50});
commRatingCountChart.xAxis().tickValues([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]);

Next up is the count-per-ABV chart. This chart is fun because we can use it as a filter to see how I rated the especially alcoholic beers that I drank. Unsurprisingly, I rated them especially well. You'll also notice that the very alcoholic beers are mostly IPAs, Belgians, or Stouts. Legend has it that India Pale Ales are very alcoholic by design. India Pale Ales were created to survive the months-long 1700's journey from Britain to India so additional hops were added to keep the beer flavorful. Since hops are bitter, extra sugar was also added offset the bitterness. The yeast in beer convert sugar to alcohol, so more sugar means more alcohol. I'm not sure why Belgian beers are especially alcoholic; my best guess is that many Belgian beers are brewed by monks, so maybe God ordained beer to be delicious and alcoholic instead of flavorless and light.

Note that the only difference in the configuration of this chart is that we use d3.max to calculate the maximum value of the domain. Again, instead of going from 0 to the maximum value, we add a bit of padding on each side to make the chart look nicer.

abvCountChart
    .width(300)
    .height(180)
    .dimension(abvDim)
    .group(countPerABV)
    .x(d3.scale.linear().domain([-0.2, d3.max(beerData, function (d) { return d.beer.beer_abv; }) + 0.2]))
    .elasticY(true)
    .centerBar(true)
    .barPadding(2)
    .xAxisLabel('Alcohol By Volume (%)')
    .yAxisLabel('Count')
    .margins({top: 10, right: 20, bottom: 50, left: 50});

The final bar chart is the number of beers I've had grouped by IBUs. The only new line of code here is the use of xUnits xUnits(function (d) { return 5;}). Here we are just using fixed units rather than the default dc.units.integers to make the chart look nicer.

ibuCountChart
    .width(300)
    .height(180)
    .dimension(ibuDim)
    .group(countPerIBU)
    .x(d3.scale.linear().domain([-2, d3.max(beerData, function (d) { return d.beer.beer_ibu; }) + 2]))
    .elasticY(true)
    .centerBar(true)
    .barPadding(5)
    .xAxisLabel('International Bitterness Units')
    .yAxisLabel('Count')
    .xUnits(function (d) { return 5;})
    .margins({top: 10, right: 20, bottom: 50, left: 50});

Data Table

To this point we have a bunch of charts that can all be interacted with to filter the set of all data down by year, month, day of the week, rating, etc. Now we will use dc to add a data table so we can see a list of those filtered results.

Here's what our HTML for the table looked like.

<table class="table table-bordered table-striped" id="data-table">
  <thead>
    <tr class="header">
      <th>Brewery</th>
      <th>Beer</th>
      <th>Style</th>
      <th>My Rating</th>
      <th>Community Rating</th>
      <th>ABV %</th>
      <th>IBU</th>
    </tr>
  </thead>
</table>

You'll notice that we create all of the column headings in the HTML to match the order of the accessor functions we pass into the columns method.

.dimension(allDim)
.group(function (d) { return 'dc.js insists on putting a row here so I remove it using JS'; })
.size(100)
.columns([
  function (d) { return d.brewery.brewery_name; },
  function (d) { return d.beer.beer_name; },
  function (d) { return d.beer.beer_style; },
  function (d) { return d.rating_score; },
  function (d) { return d.beer.rating_score; },
  function (d) { return d.beer.beer_abv; },
  function (d) { return d.beer.beer_ibu; }
])
.sortBy(function (d) { return d.rating_score; })
.order(d3.descending)
.on('renderlet', function (table) {
  // each time table is rendered remove nasty extra row dc.js insists on adding
  table.select('tr.dc-table-group').remove();
});

The group method call here is weird. The data table object expects group to be given a function that returns a string, and then injects the string into the first row of the table. Yuck I'm not a fan of how it looks, so we'll use a renderlet to remove that row from the DOM every time the data table is redrawn.

Renderlets are a great way to do additional post-processing of a chart such as SVG manipulations, triggering other chart events, or even interacting with other JavaScript objects as we'll do later with the map.

Also, notice we use d3 to select and operate on DOM elements instead of using jQuery: table.select('tr.dc-table-group').remove();

We configure the table to be sorted by rating score descending, using dc.pluck as a short-hand for function(d) { return d.rating_score; }.

Data Count

We use the data count widget to dynamically display the number of selected check-ins and the total number of check-ins at the top of the visualization.

<div class="col-xs-12 dc-data-count dc-chart" id="data-count">
  <h2>Beer History
    <small>
      <span class="filter-count"></span> selected out of <span class="total-count"></span> records |
       <a id="all" href="#">Reset All</a>
      </span>
    </small>
  </h2>
</div>
dataCount
    .dimension(ndx)
    .group(all);

Filters

The pie charts and bar charts are used as controls to filter the resulting dataset, allow us to filter the dataset by month and so forth. For our visualization to be usable, we need to give users the ability to turn off the filters after we've turned them on.

To do this, we'll add some "reset" links in the HTML and then register click handlers to reset the respective charts via filterAll.

For each chart we'll add reset links like this:

<div class="col-xs-2 pie-chart">
  <h4>Year <small><a id="year">reset</a></small></h4>
  <div class="dc-chart" id="chart-ring-year"></div>
</div>

Then sprinkle in a bit of JavaScript for the click handlers and we are good to go:

d3.selectAll('a#all').on('click', function () {
  dc.filterAll();
  dc.renderAll();
});

d3.selectAll('a#year').on('click', function () {
  yearChart.filterAll();
  dc.redrawAll();
});

d3.selectAll('a#month').on('click', function () {
  monthChart.filterAll();
  dc.redrawAll();
});

d3.selectAll('a#day').on('click', function () {
  dayChart.filterAll();
  dc.redrawAll();
});

Render!

Now that we've written all of the HTML, set up the crossfilter groups and dimensions, and specified our dc charts it's showtime! A single line of code makes the magic happen: dc.renderAll();

Leaflet

Leaflet is an awesome library for making interactive maps. Since we have some empty real estate at the top right of the screen and coordinates for the brewery that made each beer I checked-in, let's add a Leaflet map to our visualization.

We included leaflet.js already:

<script type="text/javascript" src="js/leaflet.js"></script>

and created a placeholder div for the map: <div id="map"></div>

Now let's instantiate the map:

var map = L.map('map');

Whenever we filter or reset our dataset we'll create a marker for each brewery and add it to a feature group, which we will then add to the map. Let's instantiate the feature group:

var breweryMarkers = new L.FeatureGroup();

We'll use Mapbox tiles as the tile layer for our map. If you want to use Mapbox too (you can use different tile providers if you'd prefer) then you'll need to create a free Mapbox account and use your own id and access token.

L.tileLayer('https://api.tiles.mapbox.com/v4/{id}/{z}/{x}/{y}.png?access_token={accessToken}', {
  id: 'mapbox.id.goes.here',
  accessToken: 'mapbox.access.token.goes.here',
  maxZoom: 16
} ).addTo(map);

Now that we've set up the map, let's write code that will add markers to the map every time the data is filtered or reset. To do this we'll put the code in the data table renderlet so that it will be run every time the data table is rerendered. Here's all the code, but let's walk through it.

.on('renderlet', function (table) {
  breweryMarkers.clearLayers();
  _.each(allDim.top(Infinity), function (d) {
    var loc = d.brewery.location;
    var name = d.brewery.brewery_name;
    var marker = L.marker([loc.lat, loc.lng]);
    marker.bindPopup("<p>" + name + " " + loc.brewery_city + " " + loc.brewery_state + "</p>");
    breweryMarkers.addLayer(marker);
  });
  map.addLayer(breweryMarkers);
  map.fitBounds(breweryMarkers.getBounds());
});

First we'll clear the map by clearing the brewery markers feature group.

breweryMarkers.clearLayers();

If we didn't do this, we'd be adding duplicate markers to the map every time the renderlet runs.

Next we'll use underscore.js to loop through each item in the (possibly filtered) dataset. Again, it's not necessary to use underscore.js but it is handy. We retrieve the data from the "all" dimension using top:

_.each(allDim.top(Infinity), function (d) {

Then we'll grab the location and name from the brewery and create a marker:

var loc = d.brewery.location;
var name = d.brewery.brewery_name;
var marker = L.marker([loc.lat, loc.lng]);

Next we'll tell each marker what text to display when it's clicked on:

marker.bindPopup("<p>" + name + " " + loc.brewery_city + " " + loc.brewery_state + "</p>");

When the loop finishes, we'll add the markers to the map:

map.addLayer(breweryMarkers);

Finally, let's zoom the map in as far as possible while still showing all markers on the map:

map.fitBounds(breweryMarkers.getBounds());

That's it for map code. Pretty simple.

End

That's the end of this tutorial. If you see mistakes, have questions, comments etc send me an email or a pull request.

TODOs

Other things that could be added to this example

  • Use map as a filter. For example, zoom the map and then click a link to filter the dataset to only what is shown in the map
  • New, more interesting charts such as rating/count per style of beer
  • Sortable tables
  • Clicking a row of the table causes brewery marker on map to pop up
  • Get Foursquare location of where I checked in each beer and add to map. Then allow for toggling of "where I drank" layer from "where it's made" layer. This could allow for filtering data by "where I drank"
  • Add reset links for the bar charts
  • Create a column in the table with a thumbnail of each beer

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Beer Drinking Data Vizualization using dc.js, Crossfilter, and Leaflet

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