I agree. Would be nice to see the region/towns name, as well as the winner name and percentage of votes. Other aspect is the click in the zoom out (magnifier) when you are focused in a town: it goes back to the country view, when I would expect to go back to the region view. Nevertheless, nice job!
Thanks for all your suggestions! Yes, we thought about implementing the hover, but we didn't have time for it. It can be tricky as well regarding performance, so we discarded it for this elections.
First of all, Pedro J. Ramírez ... buaaargh <vomiting>
Having saiud that, it is a pretty cool way to show information, yet it could be better. That way of showing the data is a bit biased and over represents PP/PSOE. At the end of the day, let's say PP "won" in Madrid, they will not be able to appoint the major anyways, cause Ahora Madrid will ally with PSOE. So basically... a bit useless.
That's very cool; both from a technical and a journalistic perspective.
Technically, this is the only application available with this data granularity.
The people at El Español is showing very cool stuff to the people instead of publishing what we called "zero numbers" - in printed press those were real papers not released to the public that allowed to tune how your company departments interacted between them and providers (like the printer).
On the municipal (for major) elections, in many cities, Podemos went with a coalition with other left-wing parties (like Equo, IU, etc) with a different name on each city (ie Ahora Madrid in Madrid, or Barcelona en comú in Barcelona)
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 56.3 ms ] threadHaving saiud that, it is a pretty cool way to show information, yet it could be better. That way of showing the data is a bit biased and over represents PP/PSOE. At the end of the day, let's say PP "won" in Madrid, they will not be able to appoint the major anyways, cause Ahora Madrid will ally with PSOE. So basically... a bit useless.
Also, "Otros" is 29.7% of the votes!!
When you check Navarra the "Otros" category makes sense. There are like 10 different organizations and N/A data over there.
That said, I think that 29% is actually a good thing. A more diverse congress is also a more independent one.
God job anyway :-p
I can guarantee that at least one comment is not by a Spaniard.
Technically, this is the only application available with this data granularity.
The people at El Español is showing very cool stuff to the people instead of publishing what we called "zero numbers" - in printed press those were real papers not released to the public that allowed to tune how your company departments interacted between them and providers (like the printer).
I read this article moments ago: http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-eu-27579898 which says the party got %8 but I don't even see the party on OP graph.
What I am missing?
EDIT: NM, Got confused with the date of the article.