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  • theyawner
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    31 year ago

    For a moment I thought it’s representing low literacy rates because of all the red.

    • @mr_m00
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      31 year ago

      Yes, which is why it isn’t recommended to use reds often to represent data as it has a negative connotation by default. Source: I do mapping, cartography, and gis work.

      • Yeontura
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        31 year ago

        But would you recommend blue to red if you wanted to highlight, say, towns which are more Kapampangan speaking?

        • @mr_m00
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          31 year ago

          I don’t recommend it. Generally, you would want to use one hue for low to high values of sequential data but you can use 2 hues to increase contrast (e.g., light blue to dark blue, light yellow to blue). Blue and red are opposing colors and is more used as diverging scales where there are neutral tones (and values) in the middle (e.g., negative values, zero, positive values; blue-pale yellow-red). Here’s a nice resource on color schemes, https://colorbrewer2.org