tag:support.nodebox.net,2012-11-01:/discussions/show-your-work/138-research-data-visualisationNodeBox: Discussion 2016-08-11T12:04:55Ztag:support.nodebox.net,2012-11-01:Comment/396103492016-04-10T21:37:17Z2016-04-10T21:37:17Zresearch data visualisation<div><p>Lovely! Thanks for sharing this.</p>
<p>Wish I could read Slovak. Frederick, please add a translate node
(when you get some free time)!</p>
<p>John</p></div>johntag:support.nodebox.net,2012-11-01:Comment/396103492016-04-10T21:48:05Z2016-04-10T21:48:24Zresearch data visualisation<div><p>I liked it too, but how did you work with non ascii chars?
Nodebox can't handle those, it's a bit frustrating... and it can't
export text, just shapes, hard to edit!</p></div>riochtag:support.nodebox.net,2012-11-01:Comment/396103492016-04-11T05:46:43Z2016-06-04T10:27:43Zresearch data visualisation<div><p>I attach a file with core nodebox code. But when I am a
beginner, the solution is a little rough, witI attach a file
nodebox code. But when I am a beginner so the solution is a little
rough, without elegance, but it works :-). For Rioch In nodebox you
can work with non-ASCII characters. The procedure is one step more
than usual. 1.Date processed in Excel 2. Save As CVS. and the third
step will open the CVS file in a text editor which supports UTF-8
code characters. For example PSpad. Set the character format to
UTF-8 and save it as a txt file. This is a solution for special
characters :-)</p></div>michaltag:support.nodebox.net,2012-11-01:Comment/396103492016-04-11T12:23:07Z2016-04-11T12:23:07Zresearch data visualisation<div><p>thanks Michaelo for the tip, it works great, guess I should have
done my research too<br>
and thanks for the file, maybe it could be optimised but looks
impressive as it is..!</p></div>riochtag:support.nodebox.net,2012-11-01:Comment/396103492016-06-23T01:37:31Z2016-06-23T01:37:34Zresearch data visualisation<div><p>Impressive<br>
()[<a href="http://dhl-tracking.org/">http://dhl-tracking.org/</a>]</p></div>c4632797