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hogi
Level XII

Why is this DropZone called "Color"

Day 1 with JMP and a user wants to generate a point plot with 2 different colors for male and female:

hogi_21-1724518422279.png

 

The easy solution: use the Color Dropzone

The surprise: The Overlay does the same.

The second surprise: "Color" can do more than just "color":
For every entry in the legend, the user gets the possibility to define the Marker Style as well - as well as Size and Transparency.

hogi_4-1724516173230.png


A lazy user doesn't configure the colors manually - again and again for every single plot and subplot.

 

One alternative (which I use just very rarely):  row states to specify Colors and Markers.

hogi_6-1724516628985.png

The disadvantage: 
the legend in Graph Builder doesn't fit.


Another alternative (which I prefer):

define suitable colors via Column Property: Value Columns
Pros:
- meaningful legends - automatically (!)

- separate settings for every column (not via rows)

- I can control (via the Overlay and Color dropzone) where I want to use the setting - and for wich plots I DON'T want to use the setting : )

- I can overwrite the setting for individual entries via the legend right click menu

hogi_5-1724516344829.png

The 3rd surprise: there is no Column Property: Value Markers *)

 

Day 2 - the JMP user detects the subtle (and not so subtle) differences between the  Color and Overlay Dropzones:
by adding a smoother:

hogi_7-1724517312154.png

Now, let's add Color to the plot
suprise 4: with Color via Color, there is just a single fit curve:

hogi_23-1724518475808.png

 

... this is when the user remembers surprise #1, tries Overlay, and falls in love with the Overlay dropzone:

hogi_22-1724518446916.png

 

So, for scatter plots there is no apparent difference between Color and Overlay - but for other plots it is !!!
And often Overlay is THE way to add color.
Another example:

hogi_12-1724517799010.pngvs.hogi_13-1724517811895.png

 

Now let's generate another points plot - where there is a difference between Color and Overlay:
Color just adds color to the points, Overlay generates separate plots for every color, overlays them

- and by doing so: hides some girls. -> dangerous!

hogi_0-1724880261687.pngvs. hogi_1-1724880274976.png

 

Let's keep the plot as a stacked bubble plot, and with the findings from surprise #2, let's now define Markers for different values
... with the help of the Color Dropzone

hogi_4-1724880690635.png

12 REPLIES 12
hogi
Level XII

Re: Why is this DropZone called "Color"

in Pictures from the Gallery#9@scwise mentions this mismatch between Overlay encoding @ 21 min .

BHarris
Level VI

Re: Why is this DropZone called "Color"

I think of "color" as being strictly color, but "overlay" as being the equivalent of the old transparencies-on-a-projector apparatus where you could "overlay" different plots on top of each other.  Yes, it's a little weird that overlay also drives the color, but I'm glad it does.  Overlay is also one of my favorite features of Graph Builder because it lets me break line plots wherever I want using a specific variable.

hogi
Level XII

Re: Why is this DropZone called "Color"

Color is much more than just "Color", see :
Why is this DropZone called "Color" 


@hogi wrote:

Day 1 ...

The second surprise: "Color" can do more than just "color":
For every entry in the legend, the user gets the possibility to define the Marker Style as well - as well as Size and Transparency.

hogi_4-1724516173230.png

zoom out view:

hogi_0-1730747394068.png

 

For Color together with Overlay, you are right.
Overlay takes away most of of Color's superpowers - just Color and Transparency are left:

hogi_1-1730747440037.png