Die Ukrainer äußern ihre Wut über die Verluste unter der Zivilbevölkerung und hoffen auf Frieden nach 1.000 Kriegstagen
nutellabizkit on 19.11.2024 10:11 AM Source is a [GfK survey from 2016](https://cdn2.hubspot.net/hubfs/2405078/cms-pdfs/fileadmin/user_upload/country_one_pager/nl/documents/global-gfk-survey_pet-ownership_2016.pdf). I used [Datawrapper](http://datawrapper.de) for the visualization
RealisticBarnacle115 on 19.11.2024 10:12 AM Does the data mean that 57% of Russians have cats and 66% of Argentinians have dogs?
jamesbyrne74 on 19.11.2024 10:21 AM I’d love to see this with both x axis sorted alphabetically. So you could see easily who had more cats than dogs or vice versa.
LustyBustyMusky on 19.11.2024 10:23 AM Interesting visualization, those there’s an error in the titles. These are percentages, not frequencies
Natac_orb on 19.11.2024 10:23 AM May I suggest a third category, if present in the data, “both”. And a stacked barplot may round up the overall image.
5 Comments
Source is a [GfK survey from 2016](https://cdn2.hubspot.net/hubfs/2405078/cms-pdfs/fileadmin/user_upload/country_one_pager/nl/documents/global-gfk-survey_pet-ownership_2016.pdf).
I used [Datawrapper](http://datawrapper.de) for the visualization
Does the data mean that 57% of Russians have cats and 66% of Argentinians have dogs?
I’d love to see this with both x axis sorted alphabetically. So you could see easily who had more cats than dogs or vice versa.
Interesting visualization, those there’s an error in the titles. These are percentages, not frequencies
May I suggest a third category, if present in the data, “both”. And a stacked barplot may round up the overall image.