Diverging scales topic
Diverging scales are similar to linear scales, but the input domain and output range always have exactly three elements. Diverging scales are typically used for a color encoding; see d4_scale_chromatic. These scales do not expose invert and interpolate methods. There are also log, pow, and symlog variants of diverging scales.
Classes
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ScaleDiverging<
Y> Diverging scales - Diverging scales are similar to linear scales, but the input domain and output range always have exactly three elements.
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ScaleDiverging<
Y> Diverging scales - Diverging scales are similar to linear scales, but the input domain and output range always have exactly three elements.
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ScaleDiverging<
Y> Diverging scales - Diverging scales are similar to linear scales, but the input domain and output range always have exactly three elements.
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ScaleDivergingLog<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with a logarithmic transform, analogous to ScaleLog.
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ScaleDivergingLog<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with a logarithmic transform, analogous to ScaleLog.
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ScaleDivergingLog<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with a logarithmic transform, analogous to ScaleLog.
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ScaleDivergingPow<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with an exponential transform, analogous to a ScalePow.
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ScaleDivergingPow<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with an exponential transform, analogous to a ScalePow.
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ScaleDivergingPow<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with an exponential transform, analogous to a ScalePow.
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ScaleDivergingSymlog<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with a logarithmic transform, analogous to a ScaleSymlog.
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ScaleDivergingSymlog<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with a logarithmic transform, analogous to a ScaleSymlog.
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ScaleDivergingSymlog<
Y> Diverging scales - A diverging scale with a logarithmic transform, analogous to a ScaleSymlog.