The x-axis shows time; each point represents the average over 6 months, taking the first/later half of the year. The y-value is the percentage of entries over this period which contains this word (or variants thereof; for example, the Twitter plot also includes the word "tweet"). This is all generated programmatically - I extended my journal script to calculate the percentage of entries containing given terms and output it in table (space-separated value) form, which gnuplot then reads. Since the data is highly specific, my gnuplot is also particular to this application. I abused gnuplot's ability to ignore non-existent columns and left it using 5 columns. The source is below:
#!/usr/bin/env gnuplot reset set terminal png set title "Prevalence of Term over Time" font "Arial,16" set border 3 set xdata time set timefmt "%Y-%m" set format x "%Y" set xlabel "Date" font "Arial,12" set xtics nomirror rotate by -45 set mxtics 0 set ylabel "Percent Entries with Term" font "Arial,12" set yrange [0:100] set ytics 10 nomirror set key autotitles columnheader enhanced reverse outside font "Arial,12" set style data lines # linewidth 2 ? set grid # plot [raw_data] using [x-col]:[y-col] [attributes]... plot "data.csv" using 1:2 linewidth 2, \ "" using 1:3 linewidth 2, \ "" using 1:4 linewidth 2, \ "" using 1:5 linewidth 2, \ "" using 1:6 linewidth 2, \ "" using 1:7 linewidth 2, \ "" using 1:8 linewidth 2
In the future I'm considering writing a script that generates gnuplot scripts. It'll be easier than remember all these ugly commands.
And here are the resulting plots. The first one is on my use of online services. You can clearly tell when I started using Reddit and how quickly it dominated my life. The growth of Twitter is much slower comparatively. Facebook is huge mostly because it's my main source of how other people are doing.
Next are some hobbies of mine, at least those I can think of off the top of my head. It's obvious when I started climbing more often (and therefore better); it's also clear that when I teach at CTY, it becomes a big part of my life. As a computer science major and now a grad student, I clearly code more than the chart shows; one could consider that as habituation, I guess.
Here's another one, on academic topics. These were all topics I considered studying in college. I eventually majored in computer science and got a certificate in engineering design, but took extra classes in all these subjects. I think it's neat that these topics has all been mentioned more often over time - that I'm still into the same subjects I was in high school and college... except design, which I haven't done any of since junior year.
I would love to do more of these, but I can't think of anymore sets of terms to compare. Comment if you can.
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