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The Visual Display of Quantitative Information
Tufte's self-published 1983 landmark — the book that revolutionized how practitioners across science, engineering, journalism, and business think about presenting data, introducing the data-ink ratio, chartjunk, and the lie factor.
The Visual Display of Quantitative Information was Tufte's first major book and remains his most widely read. Self-published through his own Graphics Press after commercial publishers declined the project — they judged that the book's quality of printing and production would make it commercially unviable — it established the foundational vocabulary of modern information design. The data-ink ratio, chartjunk, the lie factor, and the principle that above all else, show the data all appear here in their canonical form. The book became a cult classic among statisticians and engineers before spreading into journalism, corporate communication, and eventually the entire professional class. A second edition appeared in 2001 with minor revisions.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The book's self-publication has entered the folklore of information design. Tufte mortgaged his house to fund the first print run. He supervised every aspect of production — paper quality, typography, binding, ink registration — because he believed that a book about visual communication had to model
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