I have been looking at the autocomplete example of places. The result only offers four or five results. Is there a way to increase the number of results offered?
https://google-developers.appspot.com/maps/documentation/javascript/examples/places-autocomplete
Related
Well, let's say that I have the query from my previous question: How to do multi graph time series on Grafana with Kusto
Then I'd like to consume the tiemposCicloBruto variable from one panel to another in order to avoid repeating queries.
I saw: https://grafana.com/blog/2020/10/14/learn-grafana-share-query-results-between-panels-to-reduce-load-time/
But there isn't any way to share variables at all...
I also tried it as a dashboard variable, but it doesn't seem to support tabular expressions at all...
You can share only input variables across dashboard panels. Variables work as primitive text substitution in one direction (from dashboard to query), and do not take into account any context in your query language.
Your link tells about sharing results of the query between different panels. If exact same result set returned to a panel fits your needs, you can reuse it "for free", without putting load on the database. You don't need to save it into any variable, you just set it as a pseudo-datasource and you get the result immediately.
You can factor this feature into design of you panels. Examples could be:
time series plus histogram visualizations of the same data;
time-series chart plus a panel with latest readings (or use other Grafana reduce expressions).
I'm trying to use a "nested" filter with a domo dashboard.
I want to input some values into a chart on domo, and then use the associated outputs as inputs in the next chart on a domo dashboard.
Ex: I have a bunch of data on search terms on a website and advertisements/products that are served for each of those search terms. Lets say you type in "Computers" and it shows that Apple, Google, Dell, and Microsoft where all advertised for the word "Computers".
I then want to take the output of that first chart (Apple, Google, Dell, and Microsoft) and then show every other search term that any of them are associated with. I.e. then show search terms like "phones" would show Google/Apple, "spreadsheets" would show Google/Microsoft, etc...
Is this possible? Essentially trying to use the output of one chart on a dashboard as input to a second chart.
Thanks
We've come across a number of issues with our Azure DevOps projects and are trying to surface relevant information to the management team with queries and dashboards on projects. Mainly it's just been counting the number of results for particular queries, e.g. when a status hasn't changed in 30 days, number of blocked items, total items in current sprint etc.
What we've been asked for though is to be able to rollup the original estimate total for all work items, and also roll up the completed work as another value. The queries and other things I've seen only seem to be able to count, rather than sum up, but some of the widgets I've seen do appear to sum things for graphs (but I'm just looking for the values).
Can anyone suggest anything?
I imagine that you have two different options here. The first being is that you could leverage the new roll-up columns and aggregate some of this information on the backlog view. Some of this makes assumptions about how you are grouping and the hierarchy of your work items.
Add a rollup column
In the Column options dialog, choose Add a rollup column, select From quick list, and then choose from one of the options listed.
Choose from the menu provided.
Progress bar displays progress bars based on the percentage of associated descendant work items which have been completed or closed.
Total number displays the sum of descendant items or the associated fields of descendant items. Totals provide a measure of the
size of a Feature or Epic based on the number of its child items. For
example, Count of Tasks shows the sum of all tasks that are linked
to parent items. The active or closed state is ignored. Rollup column
menu
Remaining Work of Tasks shows the sum of Remaining Work of tasks that are linked to the parent item.
If you wanted to instead see the summarized details on a dashboard, I'd recommend downloading the Query Tile PRO marketplace extension. Let's say you had a query already defined:
The options support sums based on query fields:
And so you have the tile with the summation value you are wanting. Just replace with other fields that you might need.
I have a dashboard with three displayed parameters:
Time range (Last month, This month, Last 30 days, ..., custom interval)
From (the begin date of the interval)
To (ending date of interval)
My point is that I want to display "From" and "To" parameters only in case when "Time range" parameter is equal to "Custom interval".
Otherwise, i want to hide them, or make them impossible to edit.
Could you help me with this please ?
Thanks.
There are a handful of techniques for selectively hiding components on a dashboard, informally called "sheet swapping".
One simple approach is to place a floating worksheet in a layer above the components you wish to hide -- and make that worksheet have filters based on calculated fields that lead to zero rows or columns being displayed when you wish to show the components below. Then if you hide the title on the worksheet, it will display as zero pixels high or as its complete height depending on the parameter settings.
Here is an example of that approach https://public.tableau.com/en-us/s/gallery/music-uk
Another form of sheet swapping that gives you a little more flexibility is to place the components that wish to selectively display inside a layout container along with a component whose size depends on the parameter setting. Then you can adjust the "fit" options for the worksheets and where and how you place the layout container to make the optional controls slide in and out of the dashboard, or slide beneath or out from under a floating component.
Joshua Milligan published a workbook demonstrating some of these techniques http://public.tableau.com/views/SheetSwappingonSteroids/PracticalExample and he also describes them in his (highly recommended) book Learning Tableau 10
Robert Rouse also published a blog entry showing some fancier sheet swapping techniques https://www.tableau.com/about/blog/2016/1/how-create-collapsible-menu-container-tableau-48610
Note, sheet swapping puts a bit of unnecessary load on the Tableau server if overdone (computing layout positions for views that won't be displayed anyway).
If you don't mind a bit of coding, another option is to embed your visualizations within an HTML page of your own design. Then you can use all the power of HTML and CSS to style parts of your UI - including hiding and showing input controls. Then write a bit of JavaScript using Tableau's JavaScript API to let Tableau know when someone updates an HTML control so it can update the visualization in response. For a really robust complex page, that might be a better choice than trying to emulate HTML/CSS with sheet swapping techniques in a Tableau workbook.
I have a feeling I am probably out of luck on this one, but Is it possible to have more than one parameter in a single drop-down list on an SSRS report? For example, the drop-down could be titled shape/color, and when opened, the top of the list shows shapes, and one can be checked, then below that in the same list, is a list of colors, where one can also be checked. Possible at all?
It is really best to have separate drop-downs for each attribute, but within a single drop-down you would first set it to "Allow multiple values". You can setup your drop-down to be formatted so that the sections of available values are grouped together. Finally, you'll need to add a query or function to check that valid combinations were selected before trying to display the results. In other words, make sure only one shape was selected. You can set an error message with a visibility that toggles based on the selection. This is one method to do what you are looking for, but if you are new to SSRS, you will probably have more specific questions along the way. Once you have more details on a specific step, you can get help with that.