Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@look
Forked from milroc/README.md
Last active May 28, 2019 07:06
Show Gist options
  • Star 0 You must be signed in to star a gist
  • Fork 1 You must be signed in to fork a gist
  • Save look/9360469 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save look/9360469 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Sunrise, sunset

Sunrise and sunset time visualization for Minneapolis, Minnesota. Adapted from D3 for Mere Mortals.

<!DOCTYPE html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="style.css"/>
</head>
<body>
<div id="day-length"></div>
<script src="http://d3js.org/d3.v3.min.js"></script>
<script src="src.js"></script>
</body>
</html>
var width = 880;
var height = 420;
var padding = 40;
// the vertical axis is a time scale that runs from 00:00 - 23:59
// the horizontal axis is a time scale that runs from the 2011-01-01 to 2011-12-31
var y = d3.time.scale().domain([new Date(2011, 0, 1), new Date(2011, 0, 1, 23, 59)]).range([0, height]);
var x = d3.time.scale().domain([new Date(2011, 0, 1), new Date(2011, 11, 31)]).range([0, width]);
var monthNames = ["Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "April", "May", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec"];
// Sunrise and sun set times for dates in 2011. I have picked the 1st
// and 15th day of every month, plus other important dates like equinoxes
// and solstices and dates around the standard time/DST transition.
var data = [
{date: new Date(2011, 0, 1), sunrise: [7, 51], sunset: [16, 42]},
{date: new Date(2011, 0, 15), sunrise: [7, 48], sunset: [16, 58]},
{date: new Date(2011, 1, 1), sunrise: [7, 33], sunset: [17, 21]},
{date: new Date(2011, 1, 15), sunrise: [7, 14], sunset: [17, 41]},
{date: new Date(2011, 2, 1), sunrise: [6, 51], sunset: [18, 0]},
{date: new Date(2011, 2, 12), sunrise: [6, 32], sunset: [18, 15]}, // dst - 1 day
{date: new Date(2011, 2, 13), sunrise: [7, 30], sunset: [19, 16]}, // dst
{date: new Date(2011, 2, 14), sunrise: [7, 28], sunset: [19, 18]}, // dst + 1 day
{date: new Date(2011, 2, 14), sunrise: [7, 26], sunset: [19, 19]},
{date: new Date(2011, 2, 20), sunrise: [07, 17], sunset: [19, 25]}, // equinox
{date: new Date(2011, 3, 1), sunrise: [6, 54], sunset: [19, 41]},
{date: new Date(2011, 3, 15), sunrise: [6, 29], sunset: [19, 58]},
{date: new Date(2011, 4, 1), sunrise: [6, 3], sunset: [20, 18]},
{date: new Date(2011, 4, 15), sunrise: [5, 44], sunset: [20, 35]},
{date: new Date(2011, 5, 1), sunrise: [5, 30], sunset: [20, 52]},
{date: new Date(2011, 5, 15), sunrise: [5, 26], sunset: [21, 1]},
{date: new Date(2011, 5, 21), sunrise: [5, 26], sunset: [21, 3]}, // solstice
{date: new Date(2011, 6, 1), sunrise: [5, 30], sunset: [21, 3]},
{date: new Date(2011, 6, 15), sunrise: [5, 41], sunset: [20, 57]},
{date: new Date(2011, 7, 1), sunrise: [5, 58], sunset: [20, 40]},
{date: new Date(2011, 7, 15), sunrise: [6, 15], sunset: [20, 20]},
{date: new Date(2011, 8, 1), sunrise: [6, 35], sunset: [19, 51]},
{date: new Date(2011, 8, 15), sunrise: [6, 51], sunset: [19, 24]},
{date: new Date(2011, 8, 23), sunrise: [7, 1], sunset: [19, 9]}, // equinox
{date: new Date(2011, 9, 1), sunrise: [7, 11], sunset: [18, 54]},
{date: new Date(2011, 9, 15), sunrise: [7, 28], sunset: [18, 29]},
{date: new Date(2011, 10, 1), sunrise: [7, 51], sunset: [18, 2]},
{date: new Date(2011, 10, 5), sunrise: [7, 57], sunset: [17, 56]}, // last day of dst
{date: new Date(2011, 10, 6), sunrise: [6, 58], sunset: [16, 55]}, // standard time
{date: new Date(2011, 10, 7), sunrise: [6, 59], sunset: [16, 54]}, // standard time + 1
{date: new Date(2011, 10, 15), sunrise: [7, 10], sunset: [16, 44]},
{date: new Date(2011, 11, 1), sunrise: [7, 31], sunset: [16, 33]},
{date: new Date(2011, 11, 15), sunrise: [7, 44], sunset: [16, 32]},
{date: new Date(2011, 11, 22), sunrise: [7, 49], sunset: [16, 35]}, // solstice
{date: new Date(2011, 11, 31), sunrise: [7, 51], sunset: [16, 41]}
];
function yAxisLabel(d) {
if (d == 12) { return "noon"; }
if (d < 12) { return d; }
return (d - 12);
}
// The labels along the x axis will be positioned on the 15th of the
// month
function midMonthDates() {
return d3.range(0, 12).map(function(i) { return new Date(2011, i, 15) });
}
var dayLength = d3.select("#day-length").
append("svg:svg").
attr("width", width + padding * 2).
attr("height", height + padding * 2);
// create a group to hold the axis-related elements
var axisGroup = dayLength.append("svg:g").
attr("transform", "translate("+padding+","+padding+")");
// draw the x and y tick marks. Since they are behind the visualization, they
// can be drawn all the way across it. Because the has been
// translated, they stick out the left side by going negative.
axisGroup.selectAll(".yTicks").
data(d3.range(5, 22)).
enter().append("svg:line").
attr("x1", -5).
// Round and add 0.5 to fix anti-aliasing effects (see above)
attr("y1", function(d) { return d3.round(y(new Date(2011, 0, 1, d))) + 0.5; }).
attr("x2", width+5).
attr("y2", function(d) { return d3.round(y(new Date(2011, 0, 1, d))) + 0.5; }).
attr("stroke", "lightgray").
attr("class", "yTicks");
axisGroup.selectAll(".xTicks").
data(midMonthDates).
enter().append("svg:line").
attr("x1", x).
attr("y1", -5).
attr("x2", x).
attr("y2", height+5).
attr("stroke", "lightgray").
attr("class", "yTicks");
// draw the text for the labels. Since it is the same on top and
// bottom, there is probably a cleaner way to do this by copying the
// result and translating it to the opposite side
axisGroup.selectAll("text.xAxisTop").
data(midMonthDates).
enter().
append("svg:text").
text(function(d, i) { return monthNames[i]; }).
attr("x", x).
attr("y", -8).
attr("text-anchor", "middle").
attr("class", "axis xAxisTop");
axisGroup.selectAll("text.xAxisBottom").
data(midMonthDates).
enter().
append("svg:text").
text(function(d, i) { return monthNames[i]; }).
attr("x", x).
attr("y", height+15).
attr("text-anchor", "middle").
attr("class", "xAxisBottom");
axisGroup.selectAll("text.yAxisLeft").
data(d3.range(5, 22)).
enter().
append("svg:text").
text(yAxisLabel).
attr("x", -7).
attr("y", function(d) { return y(new Date(2011, 0, 1, d)); }).
attr("dy", "3").
attr("class", "yAxisLeft").
attr("text-anchor", "end");
axisGroup.selectAll("text.yAxisRight").
data(d3.range(5, 22)).
enter().
append("svg:text").
text(yAxisLabel).
attr("x", width+7).
attr("y", function(d) { return y(new Date(2011, 0, 1, d)); }).
attr("dy", "3").
attr("class", "yAxisRight").
attr("text-anchor", "start");
// create a group for the sunrise and sunset paths
var lineGroup = dayLength.append("svg:g").
attr("transform", "translate("+ padding + ", " + padding + ")");
// draw the background. The part of this that remains uncovered will
// represent the daylight hours.
lineGroup.append("svg:rect").
attr("x", 0).
attr("y", 0).
attr("height", height).
attr("width", width).
attr("fill", "lightyellow");
// The meat of the visualization is surprisingly simple. sunriseLine
// and sunsetLine are areas (closed svg:path elements) that use the date
// for the x coordinate and sunrise and sunset (respectively) for the y
// coordinate. The sunrise shape is anchored at the top of the chart, and
// sunset area is anchored at the bottom of the chart.
var sunriseLine = d3.svg.area().
x(function(d) { return x(d.date); }).
y1(function(d) { return y(new Date(2011, 0, 1, d.sunrise[0], d.sunrise[1])); }).
interpolate("linear");
lineGroup.
append("svg:path").
attr("d", sunriseLine(data)).
attr("fill", "steelblue");
var sunsetLine = d3.svg.area().
x(function(d) { return x(d.date); }).
y0(height).
y1(function(d) { return y(new Date(2011, 0, 1, d.sunset[0], d.sunset[1])); }).
interpolate("linear");
lineGroup.append("svg:path").
attr("d", sunsetLine(data)).
attr("fill", "steelblue");
// finally, draw a line representing 12:00 across the entire
// visualization
lineGroup.append("svg:line").
attr("x1", 0).
attr("y1", d3.round(y(new Date(2011, 0, 1, 12))) + 0.5).
attr("x2", width).
attr("y2", d3.round(y(new Date(2011, 0, 1, 12))) + 0.5).
attr("stroke", "lightgray");
div#day-length text {
fill: gray;
font-family: Helvetica, sans-serif;
font-size: 10px;
}
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment