Skip to content
DHNow
  • Home
  • About
    • About DHNow
    • History
    • Our Staff
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Resources
    • All Posts
    • Subscribed Feeds
    • Nominate an RSS Feed or Source
    • Feed & Source Criteria
  • Participate
    • DHNow Editor Programs
    • Sign up to be a Guest Editor
    • Sign up to be an Editor-at-Large
    • Our Editors
Editors loginEditors login
DHNow

Uncategorized

Blog Uncategorized Resource: Update: How to geocode a CSV of addresses in R
Uncategorized

Resource: Update: How to geocode a CSV of addresses in R

By: Martin FrigaardJune 17, 2020December 17, 2024
Resources

This post is an update from the previous post, “How to geocode a CSV of addresses in R”. We will be using the ggmap package again, and be sure to investigate the usage and billing policy for Google’s Geocoding API.

Read full post here.

 

Data Journalism in R How to Insights maps rstats tidyverse tutorial

Post navigation

Previous post
CFP: The Third Workshop on Visualization for Communication (VisComm) at VIS 2020
Next post
Opportunity: ELO Amplify Anti-Racism Fellowships (June 21)

Editors' Choice

  • Editors’ Choice: Bears Will Be Boys
    by Colleen Nugent
    July 16, 2025
  • Editors’ Choice: Crafting Encounters with Humanities Data: A dh+lib Special Issue
    by Colleen Nugent
    July 16, 2025
  • Editors’ Choice: Datafying Mixed Social Identities: Nonbinarity as the Complementary of Intersectionality
    by Colleen Nugent
    July 2, 2025

News

  • Report: Bringing Back the Joy in Teaching
    by Colleen Nugent
    July 16, 2025
  • Resource: A more interesting upside of AI
    by Colleen Nugent
    July 16, 2025
  • Announcement: Joint Conference on Digital Libraries 2025
    by Colleen Nugent
    July 16, 2025

Blog Posts

  • DHNow: 2017 in Review
    by Colleen Nugent
    December 12, 2017
  • DHNow: 2016 in Review
    by Colleen Nugent
    December 20, 2016
  • Using the Bookmarklet
    by Colleen Nugent
    April 27, 2016
DHNow

Digital Humanities Now aggregates and selects material from our list of subscribed feeds, drawing from hundreds of venues where high-quality digital humanities scholarship is likely to appear, including the personal websites of scholars, institutional sites, blogs, and other feeds.

  • Home
  • About
    • About DHNow
    • History
    • Our Staff
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Resources
    • All Posts
    • Subscribed Feeds
    • Nominate an RSS Feed or Source
    • Feed & Source Criteria
  • Participate
    • DHNow Editor Programs
    • Sign up to be a Guest Editor
    • Sign up to be an Editor-at-Large
    • Our Editors

© 2025 Digital Humanities Now. All Rights Reserved

Editors loginEditors login