Als @badlogic mentioned in his video the absolute prices on the y-axes are not "historical correct" but the values are "comparable, relative to each other". This sounds to me like a relative scaling in percent would be a better fit for this than the absolute scaling with real euro values.
100% could be the first historical, shown value or even the min or the max values.
Als @badlogic mentioned in his video the absolute prices on the y-axes are not "historical correct" but the values are "comparable, relative to each other". This sounds to me like a relative scaling in percent would be a better fit for this than the absolute scaling with real euro values.
100% could be the first historical, shown value or even the min or the max values.
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