![]() If a code occurs three times in the paragraph, another code only once, then the first code gets ¾ of the area, the second only ¼ of the area. In the case of several codes, the available space is assigned proportionally to the coded segments in the paragraph, taking into account how frequently a code has been assigned in the paragraph – not how extensive the segment is. By default, each paragraph is the same width, regardless of how many characters it includes. If several codes appear in the same paragraph, the colors of both codes are listed in the cell of the chart provided for that paragraph. ![]() In “Doc 1,” the first coded segments are in paragraph two, where two blue and one red code are visualized. You can see that there were no coded segments in any of the documents in the first paragraph. In this example, you can see 10 paragraphs for three different documents. To give you an idea how this works, see the screenshot below. If a code is used more than once in a paragraph, it is still only visualized once. Each code that is present in the paragraph is represented by a colored section of the bar. The cells show the codes that exist in each paragraph of each document with a bar assigned the same color as the code it represents. The Document Comparison Chart shows the documents on the y-axis and the paragraph numbers on the x-axis, making it possible to compare the flow of codes in each document. ![]() Please note: Only texts and table documents can be analyzed with the Document Comparison Chart.
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