2. Maybe it's me being a little tin-foil-hatty, but parts of this feel aggressively LLM-written (a suspicion enhanced by looking at some of the other essays on the site.) OP, if you're the author — I strongly advise just getting rid of fluff like "By leveraging Evidence.dev, we've created a comprehensive and visually appealing dashboard that provides valuable insights into FC24 player statistics. This dashboard includes high-level metrics, top player highlights, and detailed analyses of countries and clubs. Whether you're a data analyst or a football enthusiast, this dashboard offers a powerful tool for exploring and understanding FC24 data.". It helps no-one, I promise!
2.: There is nothing wrong with using an LLM to assist you in writing, just make sure to prompt right and give hints to make the result more concise. If it saves you time and the outcome is good enough go for it.
* Works well on Firefox mobile / android * On Firefox desktop, only every other country name is displayed, for some reason. The name of other countries can only be seen by hovering on the bars, in a tooltip. This kind of makes the chart not so usable * On Chromium desktop, linux (A somewhat old version, v90), the bar charts don't display at all, the error message below is shown in the console:
Uncaught (in promise) TypeError: e.at is not a function
at new bi (VennDiagram.svelte_svelte_type_style_lang.BQFLKn8W.js:1)
at VennDiagram.svelte_svelte_type_style_lang.BQFLKn8W.js:4
at /async https:/fc24.fact.ist/_app/immutable/nodes/0.vgSQbLXH.js:1
at async Promise.all (/index 3)
at async $p (0.vgSQbLXH.js:1)
at async Tp (0.vgSQbLXH.js:1)
at async Pt (entry.CN-1OTG9.js:1)
at async ut (entry.CN-1OTG9.js:1)
at async cn (entry.CN-1OTG9.js:1)
at async Module.hn (entry.CN-1OTG9.js:1)