I think this query is best served on the qgis user mailing list so I'm moving it there.
In terms of creating a choropleth, QGIS is well suited to the task and there is a multitude of ways in which you can achieve this. The simplest may be to change the layer symbology from single symbol to a graduated [1] symbol type. QGIS also supports categorized and rule based symbol types which you can combine with data driven properties for advanced cartography and design. [1] https://docs.qgis.org/3.16/en/docs/user_manual/working_with_vector/vector_properties.html?highlight=graduated%20symbol#graduated-renderer On Wed, 30 Jun 2021, 23:46 David Rhoads, <[email protected]> wrote: > Does QGIS support choropleth mapping (i.e. ability to apply colors to > polygons depending on a numerical value associated with each polygon)? > Our application has to do with looking at the relative statistics of > voting precincts in Chester County, PA. We want to easily find outliers. > > If so, where in the documentation is this described? I've done some > looking and have not been able to find anything related. > > Thanks, > David Rhoads > _______________________________________________ > Qgis-community-team mailing list for organizing community resources such > as documentation, translation etc.. > [email protected] > https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-community-team >
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