I am using Tableau public desktop - the free version. I am trying to place multiple worksheets, and dashboards on one page and link it to my blog site.
Is there a way to customize views in this application? Something like this:
https://public.tableau.com/views/CountyGuide-Demographics_0/DemographicsAll?%3Aembed=y&%3Ahost_url=%2F%2Fpublic.tableausoftware.com%2F&%3AshowVizHome=no&%3Ascrolling=no&%3Atabs=no&%3Atoolbar=yes&%3Aanimate_transition=yes&%3Adisplay_static_image=yes&%3Adisplay_spinner=yes&%3Adisplay_overlay=yes&%3Adisplay_count=no&%3AloadOrderID=0#3
Or does it require a subscription to accomplish this feat? Is there a workaround for if not?
Thanks for any input.
All the cool stuff WRT layout/navigation in the sample link you posted are possible in Tableau Public.
You don't need subscription for creating dashboards and adding actions for navigation etc.
You can see Tableau Tutorials for details.
Related
I'm a little stuck here, because the dashboards that I import are looking different on Tableau Online ( and so on on my website )
So on Tableau Desktop it looks like this:
Tableau Desktop screen
And after I upload it, it looks like this:
Tableau Online screen
I already tried to remove every border line, add one but in blank...
I'm lost there since I do not understand what the problem is.
As the workbook is rendering in the browser there will often by small differences compared to the workbook on Tableau desktop.
These have been raised numerous times by the Tableau community, you may find the following useful as Tableau users discuss ways to generalize table formats to limit different rendering on desktop vs. online:
https://community.tableau.com/ideas/4113
Another option is to try disabling rendering on the published workbook, see this link in the official Tableau community:
https://community.tableau.com/thread/217263
Which suggests:
Probably due to rendering. Try adding "?:render=false" at the end of
the URL.
Example:
/ViewName?:render=false
Hi I am new to tableau and I am trying to create a similar version of visualization as the super sample superstore on the website. https://www.tableau.com/solutions/gallery/super-sample-superstore
I am wondering is there any training materials or tutorials regarding to this sample. if not, a specific question on this is how the three navigating buttons on the top right were created and how the perimeters where created to link to different DASHBOARDS.
descriptive/prescriptive/annotations
You can learn tableau from https://www.tableau.com/learn/training
Hear you can find all information with videos.
Im in need for good candlestick chart for my web app and chart at http://bitcoinwisdom.com/ is really what Im looking for. I like the way you can zoom and move with it. Is it possible to figure out what they are using or do you think they made it up on their own? If so with what tools? Another amazing charting can be found here https://www.tradingview.com/e/ these two sites have even better charting than some desktop apps and I wanna know how they did it.
In searching the bitcoinwisdom's forums I found a couple posts asking for the exact same thing. In fact, I stumbled upon your SO post here looking for the same thing.
According to those forum posts' responses they used d3js.org with the rest being custom code. Unfortunately for us as their implementation is very impressive! View source on the page and look for the JS files they are referencing. The code is obfuscated and minified so porting it will be very difficult.
I am building a fairly simple website based on typo3. I'm new to the CMS but I've read almost everything I could find about it - tutorials, wikis, documentation. I'm stuck with designing a functionality for the administrator to be able to create records with predefined attributes (category, date, info, image, ...) and those records to be listed in a table on the front end with a "View detailed" link on each row. Will I need to develop a complete extension for this? From where the administrator will enter these records? How can I iterate them on the front end?
I apologize in advance if my question is too broad.
The Kickstarter extension provides a full stop solution for your needs. There is a good set of, if slightly outdated, screencasts explaining how to use this extension to create your custom record types and associated front-end views.
I'm looking to build an interactive web-based org chart for a large organization. I somewhat like the interface at ancestry.com where you can hover over people and pan/zoom around and click on different nodes to make them the root.
Ideally, I'd like it if people could belong to multiple organizational entities like committees, working groups, etc. In other words the API should support graphs in general, not just trees.
I'd like to be able to visually explode each organizational substructure into substituents by clicking on it, with a nice animation of the employees ballooning or spilling out so you can really interactively drill down through the organization.
I found http://code.google.com/apis/visualization/documentation/gallery/orgchart.html but it looks a bit rudimentary.
I know there are desktop tools like OrgPlus and Visio that can build static charts but I'm really looking for a free, web-based API with open standards-based output like SVG or HTML5 Canvas elements rather than Flash or some proprietary output. Something I can embed into a custom web application and style myself. Something interactive.
Check my solution on github: OrgChart.svg This is a modern full SVG orgchart with support of custom styling, tip-over / stacking possibility in the best known form. I would be very happy if it helps someone. It is based on snap.svg.
I ended up using the SpaceTree API from the Javascript InfoVis Toolkit to build my org chart:
http://philogb.github.com/jit/static/v20/Docs/files/Visualizations/Spacetree-js.html
I've had a go at building this in d3.js. It was originally built for data pulled from Yammer but now it will work with any csv - like this one.
Here's the repo and here's a demo. You will need to know a little html/javascript to customise it for your application.
There is this one for asp.net but I have only ever added it to my bookmarks so I can't vouch for how standards compliant it is:
http://www.orgchartcomponent.com/
Something you should also consider when you are looking in to this is your charting requirements. Many org charts only support a single top node. If you wanted to map a family tree for example then this might not be the case.