Index | Day | Value | Change | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dow Jones | 10765.45 | −32.82 (−0.30%) | ||
S&P 500 | 1256.92 | −8.10 (−0.64%) | ||
Sparklines showing the movement of the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 during February 7, 2006 |
A sparkline is a very small line chart, typically drawn without axes or coordinates. It presents the general shape of a variation (typically over time) in some measurement, such as temperature or stock market price, in a simple and highly condensed way. Whereas a typical chart is designed to professionally show as much data as possible, and is set off from the flow of text, sparklines are intended to be succinct, memorable, and located where they are discussed. Sparklines are small enough to be embedded in text, or several sparklines may be grouped together as elements of a small multiple.
In 1762 Laurence Sterne used typographical devices in his sixth volume of The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman to illustrate his narrative proceeding: "These were the four lines I moved through my first, second, third, and fourth volumes,–".[1]
The 1888 monograph describing the 1883 eruption of the Krakatoa shows barometric signatures of the event obtained at various stations around the world in the same fashion, but in separate plates (VII & VIII), not within the text.[2]
In 1983, Edward Tufte had formally documented a graphical style, then called "intense continuous time-series", encouraging extreme compaction of visual information.[3] In early 1998, interface designer Peter Zelchenko introduced a feature called "inline charts", designed for the PC trading platform Medved QuoteTracker. This is believed to be the earliest known implementation of sparklines.[4] In 2006, the term sparkline itself was introduced by Edward Tufte for "small, high resolution graphics embedded in a context of words, numbers, images".[5] [6] Tufte described sparklines as "data-intense, design-simple, word-sized graphics".[7]
Subsequent to his origination the term "sparkline", in 2020 Tufte attributed the origination of "sparkline-like inline graphics" to Donald Knuth's "METAFONTbook". [8]
On May 7, 2008, Microsoft employees filed a patent application for the implementation of sparklines in Microsoft Excel 2010. The application was published on November 12, 2009,[9] prompting Tufte[10] to express concern at the broad claims and lack of novelty of the patent.[11] On 23 January, 2009, MultiRacio Ltd. published an OpenOffice.org extension "EuroOffice Sparkline" to insert sparklines in OpenOffice.org Calc.[12] On March 3, 2022, LibreOffice developer Tomaž Vajngerl announced a new implementation of sparkline for LibreOffice Calc, including the support to import sparklines from OOXML Workbook format, and this is landed at 7.4 release.[13]
Sparklines are frequently used in line with text. For example:
The Dow Jones Industrial Average for February 7, 2006 .
The sparkline should be about the same height as the text around it. Tufte offers some useful design principles for the sizing of sparklines to maximize their readability.[6]