Decrease the population of illegals and remove the ability for multi-national corporations to purchase single family homes. Problem solved.
rollduptrips on
If it were even, the slope would be 1. Am I reading that right?
[deleted] on
[deleted]
theemilyann on
I’m confused. The title says counties but these are cities. Some of them may also be county names, but Houston, TX, at least, is in Harris county. Houston county is a forest.
Ogar_the_Thrash on
What’s happening in Lyon Co Nevada that’s causing income to grow so quick?
turb0_encapsulator on
I would love to see the interactive version of this. What about places like Austin, Minneapolis, and Seattle that have had significant zoning reform?
brokenblinker on
Always always use an equal x and y scale if possible if you want the viewer to have any intuition for what you’re displaying.
ThinkOrDrink on
Data might be interesting but this plot is *not* beautiful.
– X and Y axes should be same scale.
– unity line should then be obvious 45deg from chart axes intersection
– X an Y should be swapped if message is “home value outpaces income” because home value > income is more intuitive to interpret if scatter is above unity line
– overall trend is.. a choice. Display that (terrible) R^2
SalvatoreEggplant on
The trend line isn’t really meaningful. † All you need are the 1:1 line and the data points. That 96% figure is also helpful.
_________________
† I actually think the trend line diminishes the figure, because there isn’t really a meaningful trend here. And it makes it look like the analyst doing something dishonest by fitting a line to a cloud of points. If anything, the mean or median ratio of *y* to *x* would be the appropriate summary statistic.
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9 Kommentare
Decrease the population of illegals and remove the ability for multi-national corporations to purchase single family homes. Problem solved.
If it were even, the slope would be 1. Am I reading that right?
[deleted]
I’m confused. The title says counties but these are cities. Some of them may also be county names, but Houston, TX, at least, is in Harris county. Houston county is a forest.
What’s happening in Lyon Co Nevada that’s causing income to grow so quick?
I would love to see the interactive version of this. What about places like Austin, Minneapolis, and Seattle that have had significant zoning reform?
Always always use an equal x and y scale if possible if you want the viewer to have any intuition for what you’re displaying.
Data might be interesting but this plot is *not* beautiful.
– X and Y axes should be same scale.
– unity line should then be obvious 45deg from chart axes intersection
– X an Y should be swapped if message is “home value outpaces income” because home value > income is more intuitive to interpret if scatter is above unity line
– overall trend is.. a choice. Display that (terrible) R^2
The trend line isn’t really meaningful. † All you need are the 1:1 line and the data points. That 96% figure is also helpful.
_________________
† I actually think the trend line diminishes the figure, because there isn’t really a meaningful trend here. And it makes it look like the analyst doing something dishonest by fitting a line to a cloud of points. If anything, the mean or median ratio of *y* to *x* would be the appropriate summary statistic.