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Originally posted by has2k1 May 23, 2024
We are excited to announce that the 2024 Plotnine Contest! Plotnine is a visualization library that brings the Layered Grammar of Graphics to Python. This is the first plotnine event of its kind, and we can’t wait to see what the community makes!
No doubt you’ve felt the love for visualization that we have here. They serve as a fantastic means to communicate information, both quantitative and qualitative. This contest aims to highlight the many great ways people visualize data. Open-source data science works better when more people contribute, and we particularly appreciate this community’s openness and generosity in sharing the code and methods you use to create beautiful, useful plots.
Quick Summary
Deadline for submissions is Friday, July 12 26, 2024 at midnight (anywhere on earth).
To enter, share your plot with a documented reprex.
Broadly, entries will be judged based on utility and beauty. Is your plot easy to read and comprehend? Is it a technically impressive, well-documented example? Does it demonstrate novel, useful elements of plot design? Is it aesthetically pleasing? We recognize that some plots may excel in one of these categories, with some in another (and some in all). We promise that the evaluation will keep this in mind.
We also realize our judging criteria are subjective. Therefore, Hassan Kibirige, the creator of plotnine, along with a panel of visualization wizards will help review this year’s submissions.
Requirements
To produce your final plot, every submission must include all the code, data, and processing steps, at least minimally documented.
Code: A link to the repository or script that fully reproduces your submission. Please include any data used to produce the plot.
Plot: Include your plot. If your submission includes many plots (e.g. it’s a multipart tutorial or article that includes many plots), please also link away to the full article.
Documentation: Whether as code comments or via prose in something like a Quarto doc or Jupyter notebook, be sure to include an explanation of what you are doing, and how your code works. Comments may be minimal, but they should help a novice to plotnine understand how your code produces your final plot.
You can enter the contest by making a submission at the plotnine contest discussions. Here is a directl link to the submission form. You may edit your submissions, and may submit multiple entries.
The deadline for submissions is July 12 26, 2024 at midnight.
Prizes
Grand Prize – In addition to the prizes below, any number of Plotnine & Posit t-shirts, books, mugs, and other swag (worth up to $200).
Runners Up – In addition to the prizes below, one year of shinyapps.io Basic plan or one year of Posit.cloud.
Honorable Mentions – A larger-than-large helping of open source stickers plus a side of hex for plot-making packages (and other goodies).
Plotnine Gallery
Although competitions and contests are fun, if we’re honest the ultimate goal of this event is to motivate you to create and share with others great plotnine examples, along with tips & tricks to make great static plots. We intend to collect entries into a community gallery for the plotnine documentation website; showcasing you and your work, and helping others benefit from your generosity.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Discussed in #788
Originally posted by has2k1 May 23, 2024
We are excited to announce that the 2024 Plotnine Contest! Plotnine is a visualization library that brings the Layered Grammar of Graphics to Python. This is the first plotnine event of its kind, and we can’t wait to see what the community makes!
No doubt you’ve felt the love for visualization that we have here. They serve as a fantastic means to communicate information, both quantitative and qualitative. This contest aims to highlight the many great ways people visualize data. Open-source data science works better when more people contribute, and we particularly appreciate this community’s openness and generosity in sharing the code and methods you use to create beautiful, useful plots.
Quick Summary
1226, 2024 at midnight (anywhere on earth).Contest Judging Criteria
Broadly, entries will be judged based on utility and beauty. Is your plot easy to read and comprehend? Is it a technically impressive, well-documented example? Does it demonstrate novel, useful elements of plot design? Is it aesthetically pleasing? We recognize that some plots may excel in one of these categories, with some in another (and some in all). We promise that the evaluation will keep this in mind.
We also realize our judging criteria are subjective. Therefore, Hassan Kibirige, the creator of plotnine, along with a panel of visualization wizards will help review this year’s submissions.
Requirements
To produce your final plot, every submission must include all the code, data, and processing steps, at least minimally documented.
You can enter the contest by making a submission at the plotnine contest discussions. Here is a directl link to the submission form. You may edit your submissions, and may submit multiple entries.
The deadline for submissions is July
1226, 2024 at midnight.Prizes
Plotnine Gallery
Although competitions and contests are fun, if we’re honest the ultimate goal of this event is to motivate you to create and share with others great plotnine examples, along with tips & tricks to make great static plots. We intend to collect entries into a community gallery for the plotnine documentation website; showcasing you and your work, and helping others benefit from your generosity.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: