I'll give him a break for not caring, given the context.

But the original poster was really WAY to vague to answer anyway. I know 
what a heat map is, but I'd still have no idea what code to write for the 
OP.

There are many types of heat maps for different types of data -- continuous, 
discrete, sparse. clustered, 1D, 2D, 3D, multi-variate, and even combined 
with elevation data, or circle size, or other hybrids.

On Tuesday, May 17, 2011 12:27:44 AM UTC-7, Indicator Veritatis wrote:
>
> Look: I do appreciate it when you give their comeuppance to people who 
> fail to follow the advice/directions of 
> http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html 
> and the like, but really: this is a Google group, you should Google 
> "heat map" or even "Wikipedia heat map" yourself rather than post 
> naive questions like that. 
>
> A heat map is a map that shows some z-valued variable distributed over 
> the x-y plane, showing the z-value as a color, such as red for very 
> hot, orange for not so hot. But the z-value does not need to be 
> temperature, the map treats it as analogous to temperature. 
>

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