This is less of a JMP question and maybe and more of an overall "best data practices" issue, but I thought I'd throw it out there since it has implications for showcasing Graphbuilder's many perks: I routinely have groupings of proteins that have different functions, and I want to show how their distribution differs across different members of the coral "holobiont:" the coral host and its symbionts. Normally, I just color code the functional categories of the proteins, make two pie graphs (one for the coral and one for the symbiont), then plot them next to each other (see attached image).....but everyone seems to hate pie graphs since they are apparently too hard to interpret! To me, one who stares at these data constantly, the pie graph seems fine, but maybe I am living in the plotting dark ages and there are other, better ways to present proportional/assemblage data.
Some alternatives are: mosaic plots, treemaps, and bar graphs. I basically just want to show that the breakdown of the proteins differ across the two organisms. I've attached the JMP table with a few variations of the same data as scripts. Are the pie graphs really that much worse than any of these alternatives? I guess one could argue that the mosaic plot most directly shows differences. Also, if anyone has any GraphBuilder tricks as to how to best compare assemblage data (since there are surely plenty of ways I haven't thought of), feel free to chime in. I would be happy to receive any input.
Anderson B. Mayfield