Tableau Desktop Crash Course: Learn the Fundamentals from zero to dashboard
I promise that if you watch this from start to finish, you'll go from zero understanding of Tableau to a dashboard published online.
- Tableau Public is a free version of Tableau Desktop with the same building experience — the only real limits are which data sources you can connect to and that you must save your work to Tableau's cloud.
- Licences come in three tiers: Creator (full Desktop and Prep access), Explorer and Viewer (which mostly consume content on Cloud or Server).
- Keep your Tableau Desktop version in lockstep with your organisation's Server or Cloud version, since features built in a newer Desktop won't publish to an older Server — Server now only updates twice a year while still receiving monthly patches.
- When checking documentation, set the version selector on the left to match your version and search within that version, rather than the global search bar which defaults to the latest release.
- The three sample workbooks (like Superstore) are a useful benchmark — if they feel slow on your machine, your whole Tableau experience will be slow.
- Tableau Public can only connect to flat files (Excel, text, JSON, PDF, spatial, statistical) plus Google Drive and web data connectors, whereas Desktop opens up the full server-based connection list.
- Crash course introduction0:00
- Housekeeping and Tim's background2:40
- What is Tableau?4:07
- The Tableau product family5:37
- Pricing and licence types9:51
- Getting Tableau for free12:26
- Tableau versions and patches15:36
- Installing Tableau Public21:02
- The Tableau Public interface24:41
- Tableau Desktop and data connections29:41
- Accelerators and templates32:02
- Finding the right documentation40:15
0:00Hey, it's Tim here. I'm super excited about
0:02this video. This is a Tableau Desktop crash
0:06course. Yes,
0:07I promise you that if you watch this video
0:09from start to end, I'll make sure that you
0:11've gone
0:11from zero, absolutely no understanding of
0:13Tableau whatsoever, to a dashboard
0:15published on Tableau
0:16Public or Tableau Cloud. And I'll string
0:19everything in between. We cover the
0:21different license types,
0:22Tableau Public, Tableau Desktop, how to
0:24install them, how to use them, the
0:26interface, building the
0:27basic charts, so you know how to get
0:29started with those as soon as you have
0:30access to Tableau itself.
0:32And we'll even talk a bit about some quirks
0:34and some tips and tricks that I think are
0:36fundamental
0:37for users to have right out of the gate.
0:39This is I think one of the best starts to
0:41Tableau that's
0:42available anywhere for free. And it's also
0:45made me wonder what would a full on Tableau
0:48course
0:49covering the entire platform made by Table
0:52au Tim look like? If you're curious, stick
0:55around to the
0:55end. As ever, let's get stuck in. Right,
0:59today, we are learning Tableau. Let's
1:02switch over to this
1:04view. So let me just check everything is
1:06working. Okay. Yeah, we're learning Tableau
1:09. What is Tableau?
1:11If you haven't noticed, let's do some house
1:13keeping first. On the left of the screen is
1:16literally my
1:16notes that I'm going to be working through.
1:18So if you're already keen and you've sort
1:19of been
1:20looking at the left hand side, this is sort
1:22of the rough agenda for the crash course.
1:25And it's quite
1:25long. And my promise to you is that I will
1:27not leave this chair until this is done.
1:29Okay. So we
1:31are going to get this all done. And this is
1:34being recorded. That's the nature of
1:36YouTube. So don't
1:37worry too much about, you know, grabbing
1:39those grabbing screenshots, you can come
1:41back to this
1:42later on. I might do some editing on the
1:43recording. But nonetheless, this will be up
1:46pretty much within
1:4648 hours once the stream is done. And the
1:49agenda is pretty straightforward. Because
1:52this is a crash
1:53course, there will be things that I'll
1:55touch on briefly, but I'll call them out.
1:57And I'll call
1:57them out for two reasons. Number one, I've
1:59been on YouTube a long, long time. So you
2:01know, if I just
2:02go to my videos, I guarantee you that most
2:05of the things I've done in the course today
2:08, there'll be
2:09a video about in my library. So for example
2:12, if you want to learn how to do
2:13calculations, you can
2:15just come on the channel and search for it.
2:16There's, you know, if you just search, you
2:18know, Tableau
2:18Tim and the topic, you pretty much find it.
2:21So whenever I call out something that I've
2:23done a video
2:23on already, just go to my channel and
2:25search for it that will cover it in more
2:27depth. I often spend
2:28five, maybe 20 minutes covering that
2:30specific detail topic. Where there isn't
2:32something I'll
2:33cover in detail here, of course, as well.
2:35So just just just be aware of that. Okay,
2:38so let's get
2:39started. So welcome, and welcome to this
2:42crash course of Tableau. And I'll quickly
2:45do a very
2:46brief introduction of myself. And I don't
2:48think you guys need an introduction. But I
2:49'll do it
2:50anyway, for the benefit of the recording,
2:52just literally one minute. My name is Tim.
2:54I'm a
2:55analytics consultant. I am also a LinkedIn
2:58instructor. So if you head over to my
3:01LinkedIn
3:02profile, you'll see that I recently
3:04introduced this course called everybody's
3:06introduction to
3:06Tableau. If you actually go to my profile
3:09and find this post, I'll put it in the
3:10comments,
3:12you can find the link just underneath this
3:15blue area that says saved. And if you click
3:17on that
3:18link, you'll have access for free for 24
3:20hours. So that's something to be aware of.
3:22I'll put it in the
3:23chat now just so you can see that. And then
3:26that very last thing is I'm a Tableau
3:28visionary. So I've
3:29been I've been working with Tableau for
3:31eight years now, really, really long time.
3:33First time
3:34I use I didn't even know I was using Table
3:36au. That's why it's eight, not seven. And
3:38yeah,
3:39I'm part of a very privileged community of
3:42people who help teach and, you know, share
3:45the values of
3:46Tableau, but also help spread the good
3:48stuff that Tableau can do, whether it's at
3:50work, whether it's
3:51for good causes, or whether it's just
3:53trying to get more people to be more data
3:55literate and work
3:56with Tableau itself. So that's pretty much
3:58summary of what I do. And hopefully, I'm
4:00going to be able
4:01to share some of that wisdom with you today
4:03. So let me go ahead and close these tabs as
4:06I no longer
4:06need them. Okay, so what is Tableau? Table
4:10au is a analytics platform. It's essentially
4:14a tool that's
4:15used in businesses to help them work with
4:18large amounts of data and help teams and
4:20analytics teams
4:21build analytical workflows. Now I'm pretty
4:25proud of a, if you go to Google and search
4:28what is Tableau,
4:29I'm pretty proud to essentially have a
4:32video that covers this topic in under 10
4:35minutes. It's got
4:36over half a million views. And so what I
4:38don't want to do is labor that here in the
4:41live stream.
4:42But what I will do is I will put a link to
4:44this in the comments in the chat as well.
4:48And this is
4:48definitely probably the best explainer of
4:50Tableau I've ever done. I'm due to do a new
4:52one. I don't
4:53know how I'm going to beat this one. But
4:55join the half a million people who've
4:57already watched this
4:58and who think it's a great introduction to
5:00Tableau. For the benefit of everyone in
5:02this
5:02stream, it's a really, the simplest way to
5:06think of Tableau is in every business, you
5:09work with data,
5:10whether it's how well you're performing,
5:12what you're selling, what you want to do,
5:15goals or targets. As your business is trans
5:17acting, doing whatever it needs to do,
5:19you're collecting data. And what Tableau
5:22offers is a platform to manage that data,
5:25store that data in
5:26some respects, and then share that data
5:29with people in the organization. It does
5:31that using a range of
5:32products and each of the products has a
5:35different role in the entire platform. So
5:37if I go over to
5:38this tab over here, I won't go into each
5:40page, I just want to give you a rundown of
5:42the products,
5:42you'll see that the platform is actually
5:45made up of several products. Most people
5:47know of Tableau
5:48desktop, but not many people actually go
5:50beyond Tableau desktop, which is a real
5:52shame in my
5:53opinion because the whole platform is super
5:55powerful. So today we're just going to be
5:57covering
5:58Tableau desktop, this option over here.
6:00There's another product called Tableau
6:02Server and recently
6:04a new product called Tableau Cloud, which
6:06was previously called Tableau Online. Now
6:08Tableau
6:09Server and Tableau Cloud, they're
6:10responsible for essentially playing the
6:12role of the platform.
6:14They're the platform that you connect to,
6:16they're where you share your work to, they
6:18're also the
6:19platforms that manage things like
6:20governance and the ability to share stuff
6:23within your organization.
6:24It's essentially a CMS for analytical
6:27content, whether it's a dashboard, data,
6:30security, data
6:32connections, all of that is managed inside
6:34of the Tableau platform. Of course
6:36businesses have other
6:37tools as well, so Tableau plays really
6:39nicely with those tools, but in essence
6:40Tableau Cloud and
6:41Tableau Server are where people go to
6:43mostly consume that information. The work
6:46that you build
6:46in Tableau desktop gets published up to
6:49Tableau Server and Tableau Cloud. It's
6:51essentially like
6:52putting up a blog on a website and once you
6:54've done that other people can see it and
6:56all the
6:57security and permissions are managed, which
6:59means your data stays safe, it stays
7:00governed,
7:01and in many cases it allows you to also do
7:04things like monitor which data sources are
7:06being used and
7:07which ones aren't, so you can better
7:09optimize the way data works. Tableau Prep
7:11is a fairly new tool,
7:13it's a data preparation tool very similar
7:15to another tool in the industry called Alt
7:17rix
7:17Analytics. That is another tool that's used
7:20to clean data. Now when we're talking about
7:23cleaning data most of you maybe do this in
7:26Excel, you might do it just manually by you
7:29know changing
7:29the way data looks, maybe you're pivoting
7:31rows in Excel, maybe you're creating power
7:33pivots to
7:34reformat data. Tableau Prep lets you do
7:36that in a visual way and again for that
7:38product I actually
7:39have another video that explains that
7:41really really well. So again I won't sort
7:43of google that now but
7:44if you go to Google and search "what is
7:47Tableau Prep" and you look at the first
7:49three video hits,
7:50my video there will explain that for you
7:52really really really well. The newest part
7:55of Tableau
7:56recently is something called CRM Analytics.
7:58This is essentially what used to be called
8:00Einstein
8:00Analytics that sat within the Einstein
8:03platform in Salesforce. In essence before
8:05Salesforce acquired
8:06Tableau, Salesforce needed their own
8:08analytics platform and that's kind of where
8:11CRM Analytics
8:11came from. So I won't delve too much into
8:13that today but that's just some context.
8:15Tableau Public
8:16is actually pretty important for today
8:18because although I'll be using Tableau
8:20Desktop and I'll
8:21occasionally switch to Tableau Public,
8:23Tableau Public is essentially the free
8:25version of Tableau
8:26Desktop. So everyone watching this video
8:29now doesn't need to pay for Tableau or even
8:31activate
8:32a Tableau Desktop trial just to try Tableau
8:34. You can actually start using this straight
8:37away from
8:37Tableau Public and again I'll show you this
8:39a little bit later on. Once you've gone
8:41through all
8:42the products you have these items here at
8:43the bottom which I won't go through in
8:45detail but
8:46in essence these are add-ons. There are
8:48additional capabilities that are added to
8:50Tableau to allow
8:51you to do different things. So data
8:53management helps you manage data better.
8:55Advanced management
8:56helps you run Tableau Cloud and Tableau
8:58Server in a more optimized way. Embedded
9:00Analytics allows
9:02you to take your Tableau dashboard and put
9:04it inside of another application. An
9:06application
9:07in this case could be inside of your CRM,
9:09it could be a portal that you have inside
9:11of your
9:12organization for managing patients or
9:14managing people or managing whatever you
9:15manage. And in
9:17other cases it could just be the ability to
9:19give someone the ability to build a
9:21dashboard using
9:22data from your system. So Embedded
9:24Analytics is a sort of abstract concept but
9:27in essence you're
9:28just taking the technology that Tableau
9:29have built and you're putting it inside of
9:31your own
9:32application or your own platform. And then
9:34they have a bunch of other integrations and
9:37stuff that
9:37I won't go through but that is in a
9:39nutshell what Tableau is. It's an analytics
9:41platform,
9:41it's got quite a big you know handful of
9:44tools now and they all sort of work to this
9:47purpose of
9:48helping businesses better manage data. Now
9:51I've explicitly been mentioning businesses
9:54because
9:54Tableau is an expensive product you know it
9:56does something that's really important for
9:58businesses
9:58and so if we just very briefly go to the
10:00pricing. It's always important to talk
10:03about pricing
10:03because licenses are linked to pricing and
10:06licenses control what you can do with Table
10:08au.
10:08So if you're going to install Tableau
10:10desktop on your machine at work or wherever
10:13you're going to
10:14have it and if you're using Tableau Public
10:15great that's free I'll come to the
10:17limitations in a
10:18second but if you're using Tableau desktop
10:20you're going to need to understand where
10:22your Pacific
10:23organization has put you in terms of
10:26licensing. So if I go to the Tableau
10:28pricing you'll see three
10:30terms that are commonly used for licensing.
10:33The first one is a Tableau creator, the
10:35second one is
10:35a Tableau explorer and the last one is a
10:38Tableau viewer. Now these are very sort of
10:41abstract terms
10:42but I like to sort of break them down and
10:44simplify them and so what I would say is a
10:46Tableau creator
10:47gets access to the full platform. If you're
10:50using Tableau desktop using Tableau prep
10:53you have the
10:54creator license. Now back in the old day
10:56this used to be called something completely
10:58different they
10:59didn't have these names and so you might
11:01still see a few people using Tableau with a
11:04licensed
11:04key specifically just for Tableau desktop
11:06or specifically for Tableau desktop and
11:08Tableau prep
11:09but broadly speaking if you're new to Table
11:11au today you're going to be either a creator
11:14,
11:14explorer or a viewer. For the benefit of
11:16everyone else an explorer and viewer are
11:19kind of the same.
11:20These two users essentially just access
11:22data on Tableau cloud or Tableau server.
11:25You can see here
11:25it says Tableau cloud I should start using
11:27my annotations you can see here it says
11:29Tableau cloud
11:30and the reason it doesn't mention Tableau
11:32server is because there's an actually a
11:33second tab here
11:35that shows you the pricing for on-premise
11:37which is Tableau server. I won't go into
11:39the detail of the
11:40difference between on-premise and hosted by
11:43Tableau but just know that Tableau server
11:45hosted
11:45on-premise is a little bit cheaper because
11:47your organization takes on the management
11:49of
11:50basically managing the server. Tableau
11:52cloud is just like Salesforce is just like
11:55any other
11:55tool like Google where you log into a
11:57website and it's all managed for you you
11:59don't have to
11:59worry about servers or systems everything
12:01sits in the cloud and so there's an
12:03additional cost for the
12:05explorer and viewer license to be able to
12:07do that and not worry about setting
12:08everything up. The
12:10creator's license automatically works on
12:12Tableau cloud and Tableau server if they
12:14already have one
12:15and as I mentioned before you've got these
12:17add-ons here at the bottom and these pretty
12:20much control
12:21additional capabilities but that's a bit
12:23beyond sort of the basics for this course.
12:25So
12:25to use Tableau desktop you're going to need
12:29a creator license. Now what if you just
12:31want to
12:31learn Tableau? What if you just want to use
12:34it for free? How do you get your hands on
12:36it? Well
12:37the first way is to start a trial. I think
12:39these trials are normally two weeks so you
12:41can you know
12:42start doing something serious and start to
12:44understand how it works. They do take your
12:46details and you might get a call from Sales
12:48force within minutes but nonetheless you can
12:50ignore the
12:50call just get learning and get stuck in
12:52with learning what Tableau can do for you
12:54except
12:55for the trial will run out and you'll get
12:57stuck. What people don't often know is
12:59there's another
13:00part of Tableau which sits on a separate
13:03website but is also running in the cloud
13:05called Tableau
13:06Public and that's what I have on this tab
13:08and Tableau Public is essentially a good
13:11way of
13:11learning Tableau without having to pay for
13:13Tableau and you might think well that's
13:15really really
13:16strange so what are the limitations? Well
13:19the limitations are that you can only
13:21connect to
13:22certain data sources and I'll show you this
13:24a little later on and you can only save
13:26your work
13:27to Tableau Public. It doesn't mean that the
13:29work is always public it just means that
13:30you always have
13:31to save it to the cloud. It's a bit like
13:33only having the ability to save files to
13:35Google Drive
13:36in the cloud. It's exactly the same sort of
13:38concept. Tableau have their own storage
13:40platform
13:40that stores all of this work and creates
13:42this wonderful gallery where you can go and
13:44see what
13:44other people are building with Tableau and
13:47they're using the exact same version of
13:49Tableau that can
13:50do what you can use Tableau for at work. So
13:52in terms of learning Tableau you can
13:54install this
13:55at home you can play around with data sets
13:57that you're more familiar with and you can
13:59learn
13:59everything you need to learn because the
14:01real only limitations is the ability to
14:03connect to a
14:04database and where you save your work. Of
14:06course you're not going to be saving your
14:08work work on
14:10your laptop at home that's not going to be
14:12something you do if you decide to try a
14:13Tableau Public but
14:15it's a very very good platform. So that's
14:17the difference between the two Tableau
14:19Desktop and
14:20Tableau Public are virtually the same and
14:22they work just as you'd expect. They're
14:25pretty much
14:25the same way the only difference is Desktop
14:27is a paid product, Public is free with
14:29limitations
14:30of where you can save what you can connect
14:32to. Everything else works pretty much
14:34exactly the same
14:35okay. So any questions so far let's let's
14:39stop there because I've not covered Tableau
14:42versions
14:42but I think I've covered what is Tableau
14:44and I've covered the Tableau platform. Hey
14:47hey hey sorry
14:47sorry to break your flow but I just need a
14:50quick favor you see this button right here
14:53it's called
14:53the subscribe button I'd really appreciate
14:55it if you just smashed it so just just hit
14:57it right now
14:58just quickly quickly and we'll get back to
15:00the course. Done thank you thank you so
15:02much let's
15:02carry on and I've covered the licensing so
15:06any questions so far on those topics I'll
15:08just give
15:09you a couple of a couple of seconds just to
15:11you know let me know in the comments.
15:14Meanwhile I'm
15:14going to go and strike out the things that
15:16I believe I've covered if I haven't covered
15:18these
15:18you guys can hold me honest and and let me
15:21know but I'll try and I'll try and keep it
15:23simple. This
15:24is a crash course I also have to keep keep
15:27things moving as well okay. So I'm not
15:30seeing anything
15:31in the comments so what we'll keep doing is
15:33we'll keep pushing on. The very last thing
15:36to be aware
15:36of before we install Tableau or do anything
15:39is what version of Tableau you're using.
15:41You see
15:42Tableau like to make things complex with
15:44all their innovation by creating new
15:46versions of Tableau
15:47every quarter essentially you'll get one in
15:50March you'll get another one three months
15:52later and so
15:53on and so forth until the end of the year
15:55and then every single month you'll get what
15:58are called
15:58patches these are small updates that
16:00improve the previously released versions.
16:03So the best way to
16:04show you this is go to a website that I don
16:06't even know what it's called the way I get
16:08to it is
16:09actually quite funny so I searched this
16:11term there used to be a term that was only
16:13ever used I think
16:15as of five years ago but it still works so
16:17I type into the search bar Tableau E S D A
16:20L T I have no
16:21idea what that means if anyone knows what
16:23that means let me know you can see it's
16:24actually here
16:25um alternate download site I don't think
16:28that is it that is it that can't be it but
16:31when you get
16:32there you can see all the releases of Table
16:34au and to me this is the best place to
16:36understand the
16:36different versions because on the left you
16:39can see the paid products you don't have
16:40Tableau public
16:41here Tableau public is downloaded from the
16:44Tableau public website but you get Tableau
16:46desktop
16:46prep server online and bridge we're just
16:49focusing on Tableau desktop and so you can
16:51see here you
16:52have 22.4 which was released in December 22
16:55.3 which was released let's go down here and
16:57have a look
16:58October and as I expand these you can see
17:00that there's actually other versions in
17:03between and
17:04this is what I meant by patches you see in
17:06June here for example when they released 22
17:09.2 it was
17:10working fine and then customers get in
17:12touch with some issues and then in August a
17:14month later they
17:15updated again and they keep doing that even
17:17as new versions are getting updated so if
17:20your
17:20organization is using an older version of
17:23Tableau let's say you're using 21.3 you
17:26still got an
17:27update back in December of 2022 just last
17:30month and so it's really important to make
17:32sure that
17:33in your organization you know what version
17:35your organization is using and you make
17:37sure you stay
17:38in lockstep with that version because it
17:40just means everything is going to work
17:42swimmingly
17:43you won't design something with a new
17:44feature and then find out you can't share
17:46it with people
17:47because you published it to a server that
17:49doesn't support that feature and that leads
17:52me to the next
17:53point which is each of these pieces of
17:55software are upgraded individually but the
17:59features within
18:00them occasionally need to be used for the
18:02same version so let me give you an example
18:05in the most
18:06recent version of Tableau they released a
18:08mapping capability called the Intersex
18:10Function I just
18:11released a video about it now if I used 22.
18:144 and built out a dashboard with that
18:17feature
18:18but then my server which is an on-premise
18:21server hadn't been updated to 22.4 you can
18:24see that that
18:25doesn't exist yet I'll explain why in a
18:27second that feature wouldn't be visible to
18:30end users
18:30once I've published it up in fact when I go
18:32to publish it up the server would tell me
18:34hey you're
18:35going to have a problem here because I've
18:37seen this feature is not available and so
18:39you're
18:39probably wondering well hey you just said
18:41that the features are updated every quarter
18:43what about
18:44Tableau server well as of 2022 Tableau
18:48stopped updating Tableau server every
18:51quarter instead
18:52they only update it twice a year so they
18:55updated in January so we're about to have
18:57the next update
18:58very soon and they updated again around
19:00about summer so you can see when when did
19:03this come out
19:04October not even not even summer end of
19:06summer basically so you get one in January
19:08and one in
19:09summer which isn't great and so this has
19:11been a big change and it's caused some
19:13challenges in some
19:14organizations but just be sure that you
19:16still get patches so even though they might
19:19not be updating
19:20Tableau server with new features every
19:23quarter they still update them every month
19:27with fixes
19:28and patches so it's still worth doing these
19:30updates so things are unstable some
19:32organization
19:33might sort of forget to do that because of
19:35the less frequent updates and so the key
19:38thing to
19:38remember here is that whatever version of
19:40Tableau desktop you're using need to make
19:42sure it's working
19:43with the same version of Tableau server or
19:45Tableau cloud the other thing you won't see
19:48in this list
19:49is Tableau cloud and because Tableau cloud
19:51is run by Tableau it doesn't need a
19:53download you simply
19:54go to a browser in this case let me show
19:56you my Tableau cloud instance and if I go
19:59ahead and log
20:00in here oh I forgot my password so let's
20:07try again when I log into it everything is
20:13available
20:15here immediately when I install software on
20:17my computer and I sign into the server
20:20everything
20:20will just work there are no upgrades
20:22required and I can just go ahead and use it
20:24Tableau desktop
20:26the latest version will work happily with
20:28Tableau cloud if you're using Tableau cloud
20:30so if you're
20:31using Tableau cloud update as often as you
20:32want it's always going to be up to date but
20:34for Tableau
20:35server just wait until your organization
20:37does the update okay what I'll do is in the
20:40edited version
20:41of this video I'll put a graphic up that
20:43explains this a little bit well better even
20:46and so just be
20:47sure to look out for that as well okay so
20:50let me go ahead and scratch that off my
20:53list I've done
20:55Tableau versions we've done licensing we've
20:57done the platform we've done and explained
20:58what is
20:59Tableau now let's look at desktop and
21:02public okay now to download them Tableau
21:05public is a little
21:06bit funny and I'll start with Tableau
21:07public first because that's the version
21:09that most people can
21:10go ahead and do right now for free there's
21:13two ways of using Tableau public the first
21:16way is to
21:16use it here in the browser the second way
21:18is to download it now most people will tell
21:20you to
21:21download it and if you want to kind of
21:22simulate an experience that you'd have at
21:25work I would say
21:26also go ahead and download it as well that
21:28's the best way to actually experience it if
21:30I go to the
21:30create drop down up here select download
21:32Tableau desktop public edition it takes me
21:35to a page
21:36it asks me to sign in if I'm not signed in
21:38and if I click the button it always asks
21:40for a few
21:41bits of information this is just marketing
21:44I can never get out of this but go ahead
21:47install
21:48put your details in here you can put like a
21:51like an alias if you want to and download
21:53the application
21:54that will allow you to download the
21:55software for Windows and Mac once you've
21:57done that run the
21:58installer there's nothing to set up other
22:00than just literally clicking okay agreeing
22:02with the
22:03terms and conditions and letting that run
22:04and then once you've done that you're
22:06pretty much good to go
22:07you'll have the software ready to run if
22:09you want to use it in the browser instead
22:12if I go back to
22:13the home page all you need to do is go
22:15ahead and sign in so let me go ahead and do
22:17that
22:18and once I'm signed in you'll notice that I
22:20actually have a profile so my profile
22:23picture is just up here if you're new I
22:25think it walks you through the experience a
22:27little bit
22:28and once you're signed in what I actually
22:30encourage people to do is don't don't go
22:32and try
22:32and build something straight away do
22:34something a little bit more crazy which is
22:36go find some of the
22:37trending visualizations right now Priya Pad
22:40am here is a colleague of mine at the
22:41information lab so
22:43if I actually go to her visualization right
22:45now any visualization which the author has
22:48made
22:48available to download if you go to this
22:51button just right here you can actually
22:53open it here
22:54in the browser and starts to edit it
22:56straight away so I can go ahead and click
22:58on that button
22:59make a copy and I'm immediately in the web
23:01editing experience for Tableau Public and
23:04actually this is
23:05the same way of editing experience you get
23:07for Tableau Desktop if you use it in Table
23:09au Cloud
23:10or in Tableau Server and check this out I
23:12can even go into the visualization I can
23:15open it up
23:16and I can even see exactly how this has
23:18been built this is just such a powerful
23:20capability and so
23:21this is how easy it is we've been streaming
23:23for such a short amount of time but I've
23:25already shown
23:26you how you can get free access into Table
23:28au just by using Tableau Public to go and
23:30see how other
23:31people are using their visualizations now
23:33granted this is a little bit intimidating
23:36okay we've got
23:36a lot of things going on here but later on
23:39today we'll actually build this exact chart
23:43we won't
23:43have it looking as nice as pre is done here
23:45because that formatting takes a bit of time
23:47so
23:48this we're not going to do that there's no
23:50time in a crash course but we will build
23:51this map
23:52with these circles and I'll show you how to
23:54do all of that and everything here should
23:55look a lot
23:56less intimidating by the time we're done
23:58okay so let me just go back and close this
24:01if you want to
24:01know what I'm doing I'll just try and annot
24:03ate it a bit more I'll go ahead and close
24:04this up here at
24:05the top and I don't want to publish this
24:07because this is not my work and I don't
24:10want people to
24:10think it's my work it's pre is hard work
24:13and we'll leave it at that okay so if you
24:15want to go ahead
24:16and create anything you know go ahead edit
24:18something but you can also just go to
24:20create here
24:21at the top select web altering and it takes
24:23you to a blank canvas and the blank canvas
24:26is great
24:26because you can then go ahead upload the
24:28data from your computer if you've got a
24:30text file a csv
24:31excel files these are all possible just
24:34through this okay now that's the web
24:38experience of using
24:39Tablo Public what about the desktop
24:41experience how do you go ahead and install
24:44the software on
24:45your machine well you go ahead and download
24:48it and install it then once you've done
24:50that what I'm
24:50going to do is I'm actually going to swipe
24:53over to my windows machine because I have
24:55my windows
24:56machine just behind my desk and I'm remote
24:58desktop into it and over there I actually
25:00have the different
25:01versions of Tablo already running so you
25:04can see the difference so the first thing I
25:06'll do is open
25:07up Tablo Public you can just install the
25:09software and when you've done that you can
25:11see it just
25:11becomes available to you to install over
25:13here so you can just go ahead and click on
25:15that and you're
25:15pretty much good to go and when you open it
25:18up you're met with this interface and this
25:20is actually
25:21the classic Tablo interface when you open
25:23that up for the first time whether you're
25:25using Tablo
25:26desktop or Tablo Public it's all the same
25:29on the left hand side you have what's
25:31called the
25:32connection pane the connection pane allows
25:34you to connect to data in the middle we
25:36have the open
25:37pane and this open pane is a bit different
25:40in Tablo Public because what it shows you
25:43some of
25:43your most recently worked on work it's a
25:45bit like your recent documents in Google
25:47Drive or on your
25:48computer the other thing that it also shows
25:52you is some of the work that you've pinned
25:54so once you
25:55start to do a lot of work you can actually
25:57pin them to this location so they're always
25:59visible
25:59as well and then very lastly the last thing
26:02we have on the right hand side is the
26:04discover pane
26:05this discover pane essentially links you to
26:08a couple of things some getting started
26:10resources
26:11which are just covered here at the top
26:13these pretty much show you how to use Tablo
26:15they're
26:15going to be hopefully just as good as my
26:18tutorials if not better because people who
26:20put them together
26:21make the product so hopefully they'd be you
26:23know much better you have a link to visit
26:25the day now
26:26we were just on Tablo Public visit the day
26:28is essentially a visualization that's been
26:31voted as
26:31a community favorite or has been selected
26:34to be showcased for the community on that
26:36day and
26:37sometimes they come through here in the
26:38product and the very last thing is
26:40resources so these are
26:41things like the Tablo blog sample data sets
26:44you can get stuck in with and the current
26:47status of
26:48Tablo online and Tablo cloud also available
26:50there so sample data is really good because
26:52it's a
26:53really good way of understanding how
26:54everything works and you can sort of bring
26:56it together as
26:57well okay so that's the interface now you
26:59're probably wondering well how is this
27:01different
27:02from Tablo desktop and this is actually the
27:04best place to show you the big difference
27:06okay when I
27:08go ahead and select more you'll see that I
27:10get only three options here so if I wanted
27:12to connect
27:13to a database such as let's say Microsoft
27:15SQL Server or I wanted to connect to
27:17something like
27:18Snowflake that's not going to be available
27:20here because Tablo Public is limited it
27:23only lets you
27:23connect to flat files which are these files
27:27here at the top so excel text json
27:29Microsoft access pdf
27:31spatial files and statistical files
27:33essentially any file on your machine and
27:35then the servers
27:36it lets you connect to are Google Drive, O
27:38Data and WebData connectors essentially
27:41these are basically
27:42other places where you might store some of
27:45these flat files and or web data that just
27:47doesn't make
27:48sense to put behind a price wall because
27:49then Tablo doesn't build those connections
27:51so that's
27:53the limitation here initially with data
27:56connections if I go ahead and close that
27:59option the other
28:00limitation is if I go over let's say I go
28:03over to the data tab you'll see that I have
28:06very few
28:07limited options up here at the top and when
28:09we go over to Tablo desktop you'll see that
28:11you get a
28:11much bigger range of options and one of the
28:14things you can't do is save to your desktop
28:17so if I click
28:18on this little icon here on the very top
28:21left hand side let me just highlight that a
28:23bit more
28:24when I click on that icon what it does is
28:27it switches to the visualization building
28:30setup
28:30essentially and that allows me to see the
28:33full range of options still in Tablo public
28:35but now
28:36if I go here and try and save the document
28:37it's not going to let me save it to the
28:39computer so
28:40here it only lets you save to Tablo public
28:42so that is the limitation of Tablo public
28:45in this
28:45particular instance it's not going to let
28:48me save to my desktop machine that said if
28:51I go to server
28:53it will show me the options that I would
28:55expect to see but in order to save this
28:57anywhere I'm
28:58always going to need to go back here and
29:00select save to Tablo public or save to Tab
29:02lo public as
29:03which allows you to rename the file or you
29:05know write over an existing file so those
29:08are the core
29:08limitations of Tablo public everything else
29:11works exactly as you'd expect there are
29:14like some tiny
29:15tiny quirks for example the behavior with
29:17Google docs is slightly different in public
29:19versus desktop
29:20again that's an intermediate thing we don't
29:22need to worry about it okay so that is Tab
29:25lo public
29:26and I'm going to go ahead and click on this
29:28little Tablo icon in the top left again to
29:30go back to
29:30this window the only reason I'm clicking
29:32there now is because I haven't connected to
29:34any data
29:35so that's the way to switch between the
29:37windows by just clicking that icon on the
29:38top right let's
29:40switch to Tablo desktop and show you how
29:42that's different so let's go ahead and go
29:45down to Tablo
29:46desktop which is just over here now
29:48immediately you can see there's a lot more
29:50going on in my
29:51connection window on the left we now get
29:53the full breakdown of things you can
29:55connect to so we have
29:56the files that we had before these are just
29:59here we have the server-based connections
30:01and we also
30:02have what are called saved data sources and
30:04saved data sources are just things that
30:06have been saved
30:07for convenience they're not necessarily
30:09data sources that kind of get you know
30:11organizations
30:13can put in in that folder for you it's
30:15essentially just an easy place to put
30:17things you work on very
30:18frequently a bit like your desktop but you
30:20can put them there so they're very easy to
30:21access
30:22we'll talk about that maybe in an
30:23intermediate session instead but don't
30:25worry about them today
30:27and the server-based connections are a lot
30:29broader so you'll definitely see that this
30:32list is a lot
30:33more impressive and the thing to point out
30:35here is that you might have seen that a few
30:37of these
30:37loaded once the window opened so these
30:41options here loaded once the window had
30:44opened fully and
30:45that's because these actually live on
30:47another part of Tablo called the Tablo
30:49exchange think of it as
30:50like a marketplace except for right now
30:52everything is free so it's kind of like a
30:53weird marketplace
30:54where everything's free at some point they
30:56're going to start selling something so for
30:58now these
30:59are all free connectors made by these
31:01companies and or Tablo and you can go ahead
31:03and use them
31:04alongside all these other connectors so i'm
31:06pretty certain you'll find your database in
31:09this list
31:09if you don't find your database in this
31:12list what's most commonly used to connect
31:14to those
31:14databases is sometimes ODBC or JDBC
31:17connector essentially it's a open source
31:21way of connecting
31:22to certain data sources using a certain
31:25protocol and the other option is the web
31:27data connector if
31:28it's web-based data you might instead use a
31:30web data connector to connect to those
31:32sources but
31:33pretty much everything else is going to be
31:35in this list and if it doesn't exist well
31:37typically either
31:38someone has built an ODBC connector or
31:39there's going to be a connector down here
31:41that lets you
31:42connect to that so pretty much everything
31:44is covered okay so let me go ahead and
31:47minimize
31:47this list because it's quite a daunting
31:49list and to be honest with you most people
31:51when when you
31:51open Tablo first time don't try and connect
31:53to a database just connect to the sample
31:55data source
31:56that's being given to you we'll get to that
31:58in a second if i go to the bottom you'll
32:01see something
32:02called accelerators now i don't know why
32:04Tablo tries to confuse people but acceler
32:06ators are just
32:07templates think of them as pre-built dash
32:09boards that you can use to you know
32:11accelerate your work
32:13essentially someone's done the work for you
32:15so you don't have to except for the fact
32:17that these
32:18three dashboards here were never built with
32:21that in mind these three dashboards are
32:23actually sample
32:24workbooks the best way to think of these
32:26sample workbooks from let's say from a
32:28professional
32:30perspective is there are a good benchmark
32:33for understanding how things should work in
32:36Tablo
32:36when it comes to speed and performance so
32:38if you open one of these three workbooks
32:41let's go ahead
32:41and do that now i'll open up the superstore
32:43workbook if you click on them it opens them
32:45up
32:45in another window if you open one of these
32:48up and your laptop or computer is really
32:50struggling to
32:51work with these specific dashboards it
32:53probably means your laptop or computer isn
32:55't appropriately
32:56specced and that happens really rarely but
32:59if these are slow your whole experience is
33:01going to
33:02be slow but if these are working fast they
33:04're interactive they're working quickly you
33:06're
33:07clicking on them and things are happening
33:08like you'd expect a normal tool to work
33:10then things
33:12are working pretty well now right now this
33:14is taking a bit longer because i'm on an m1
33:16mac and
33:16you know everything's a bit weird actually
33:18no this is on windows so it's just taking
33:19longer i don't
33:20know why but um this should just work so
33:23for example when i hover over these data
33:26points i
33:27should get nice fast tool tips when i click
33:29on them the whole visualization should
33:31react and you
33:32should get a nice sort of snappy experience
33:34switching between the tabs and of course we
33:36haven't published this up to the browser
33:38but if you were to publish this to the
33:39browser
33:40generally speaking you should be seeing
33:42roughly the same sort of performance so
33:44that's why these
33:44are a good benchmark again i don't want to
33:46confuse you too much by clicking around and
33:48doing a bunch
33:48of different things i just want to show you
33:50what to expect when it comes to performance
33:52and load
33:53times and how things should work okay let's
33:55go ahead and actually close this because we
33:57don't
33:58i've actually ended up opening this again
34:00so that's fine what we'll do is we'll keep
34:02this
34:02open for now we'll keep it here we don't
34:04need this window for the next step but if i
34:06go back to the
34:07connection window just by clicking on that
34:09icon again at the top you can see that we
34:11have the
34:11accelerator still here on the bottom and
34:14you can now see we have an item here in the
34:17open pane
34:17now when i hover over it you have this
34:20little pin icon that you can click on it's
34:22really really
34:23small i'll try and highlight it here for
34:25you right there that keeps this workbook in
34:28this position so
34:29essentially this won't move anywhere if
34:31anything gets opened that will always stay
34:33on that top row
34:34if you have a lot of them you can arrange
34:36them as well you can move them around and
34:37just to sort of
34:38get things nice and tidy now if you want
34:41more templates you can go over to this
34:43right hand side
34:45and select more accelerators templates and
34:48when you do that you'll actually find that
34:50there have
34:50been some dashboards that have been made
34:52that already try and answer certain
34:54questions and
34:54actually just like we did with tableau
34:56public where we went to find different dash
34:58boards you
34:59can work with here you can go and find dash
35:01boards that you can actually use at work
35:03that connect to
35:04things that you might be familiar with for
35:06example salesforce maybe you're in a
35:08finance team and you
35:08want to go and see what other corporate
35:11finance teams are building the only word of
35:13caution i'll
35:14say to you is that some of these dashboards
35:15have been built by you know people everyday
35:18people in
35:18the community that build fantastic work and
35:20you can tell because they look really
35:21really good
35:22and some of them let's just say that the
35:25jury's out on whether they look good or not
35:27but the work
35:29that's been done in the connection has been
35:31fantastic so they are set up correctly and
35:33you
35:33can really generally trust how they brought
35:35the data models together to support the
35:37visualizations
35:38that you want to build so if i let's say i
35:40i want to search for a dashboard that talks
35:43about a
35:43wealth investment or insurance broking so
35:46let's go ahead and search insurance i can't
35:49type so let's
35:50go search insurance insurance can i is that
35:53actually correct no matching content
35:56insurance
35:57i can't spell can i let's just type this
36:00let's type in sure no no no matching
36:02content there's
36:03nothing on insurance that's so weird okay
36:05let's go to corporate finance instead and
36:07just look what's
36:07here so the most recent one here is this
36:09executive kpi dashboard by bistri i
36:11actually know who built
36:13this but it's a really i think it's a
36:15really nice dashboard i think it has
36:16actually been this is one
36:17of the sort of better aesthetics that you
36:20get on the on the tableau exchange and this
36:22one's actually
36:23customizable you can click on it and do a
36:25bunch of stuff with it download it and use
36:28it and it's
36:28got a how to use page and everything so you
36:30can really kind of do some awesome things
36:33with it if
36:33i scroll back up and i go back let's let's
36:37find one more uh let's go back here let's
36:40find one more
36:42um let's just go back down let's go see
36:45what else do we have these are all a little
36:47bit a little bit
36:48strange let's go somewhere else let's see
36:51if well we do have an insurance section i
36:53don't know why
36:54it wasn't coming up in the search if i
36:56scroll down um i'm gonna looking for these
36:57ones because
36:58these are the ones the information i built
37:00where i work so of course i'd look for them
37:01so let's go look at this insurance under
37:04writer performance i also know who built
37:07this is a
37:08colleague of mine called ellen blackbird uh
37:11blackburn even um her work is fantastic she
37:14's
37:14just really got a great eye for design and
37:15these are dashboards that really excel at
37:18showing you
37:18what's possible with tableau so if you want
37:20to use these absolutely get stuck in and
37:22get involved
37:23anyway i'm here to teach you how to use the
37:25tool not how to use templates so the very
37:28last thing is
37:29the discover pane on the right hand side
37:31the only way this is different from tableau
37:33public
37:34is we have a little bit more of a training
37:36section slightly longer list of resources
37:39and you often
37:40get updates from tableau marketing on the
37:43bottom right so you can actually sometimes
37:45see things
37:46like conference announcements and so on and
37:48so forth in there now if you're really sort
37:50of
37:50advanced in your organization it is
37:53possible to change this whole right hand
37:56side section
37:57to point to a web page instead so in this
37:59right hand side section you can actually
38:02point to a
38:02specific page in your organization and so
38:05you can put information for people who use
38:07tableau
38:08straight away maybe it's guides maybe it's
38:10information about who runs tableau
38:11uh status updates all of that can live on
38:13the right hand side of that and again i've
38:15done a
38:15video explaining how that works and it's
38:18really really good to see okay so um i
38:20think we have done
38:21what we need to do on this interface i'm
38:23now going to switch back to my mac so we
38:25can actually start
38:26working with some data so let's go ahead
38:28and go back and make sure we cross off what
38:31we have
38:31covered and what we haven't covered so we
38:33've covered tableau desktop and tableau
38:35public and
38:35just the difference between the two of them
38:37we're about to start getting uh connecting
38:39with the data
38:40so let's go ahead and strike that um a note
38:42about installation i think i've already
38:44covered how to
38:45download them the installations are pretty
38:47straightforward the only thing worth
38:48noticing
38:49here is um whatever version you downloaded
38:52and installed last becomes your default
38:55version so
38:56it is possible to have multiple versions of
38:58tableau on your machine this is for the
39:00purpose of
39:01upgrades if you've just upgraded to a new
39:03server and you'd still like to have the old
39:05version
39:05around so you can check things work
39:08correctly that is an important step so if i
39:11uh grab let's grab my
39:12applications folder here let me just show
39:15you this i typically have the last two
39:18versions of tableau
39:18so you can see i have 22.3 and 22.4 22.3
39:22and 22.4 for tableau prep in windows uh it
39:26's
39:26exactly the same whatever you last
39:28installed becomes your default version that
39:30's installed
39:31on your machine so bear that in mind if you
39:33want to make it a default version let's say
39:36you want
39:36to make an older version the default
39:37version you need to kind of run the
39:38installer again and that
39:40will become the default version on your
39:41machine otherwise just pay attention to
39:43what you're
39:43opening and closing and make sure you don't
39:45make that mistake like i have done
39:47sometimes okay so
39:48just bear that in mind um uh parvin for
39:51your benefit the recording this is youtube
39:54um everything
39:55that's recorded say it will be available so
39:56don't worry about that i just saw your
39:58comment at the
39:58corner of my eye so i thought i'd cover
40:00that so that's the only quirk with
40:01installation you can
40:02install multiple versions the latest one
40:04you've installed becomes your default if
40:06you want to make
40:07an older version the default install it
40:09again simple as that right um let's go
40:12ahead and cross
40:13this out okay finding the right
40:15documentation generally the last thing i
40:17want to cover
40:18you would be amazed how often people do not
40:21know where the documentation for tableau is
40:24because i
40:24think most people assume that documentation
40:26is generally poor but tableau documentation
40:28is
40:29exceptional it's really really good it's
40:31one of the things i'm worried about with
40:33all the layoffs
40:33at the moment that that will probably be
40:35one of the places we do see things get
40:36worse because it's
40:37the kind of thing that many people who pay
40:39attention really go to so if i go to table
40:41au.com
40:42and i'm going to show you this just from
40:45the tableau website because i think it's
40:47just this
40:47is just so important to know you go to the
40:50resources tab and if you go to support and
40:52you
40:52go to tableau help it takes you to this
40:55page and this is the tableau documentation
40:58the thing to
40:59pay attention to is that over here on the
41:02left hand side you have the version so
41:04remember earlier
41:05on i talked about being aware of what
41:07version you're using this is an important
41:09thing to bear
41:10in mind because if you change the version
41:12on this left hand side it changes the
41:14documentation to the
41:15right to match that version and so you want
41:17to make sure you're looking at the
41:18documentation
41:19for your version because you might go find
41:21the version that talks about a different
41:23operating
41:24system or a different sort of technique
41:26because you're using in the browser versus
41:29desktop
41:29just make sure you're looking at the right
41:31version once you've selected the version
41:32you'll see the
41:33right hand side updates you can expand any
41:36of these and each of them get a full link
41:39to the
41:39full documentation along with a bunch of
41:41other resources now if you're a real geek
41:43like me you
41:43can just go ahead and click into all of
41:46these and it's great because it not only
41:48tells you what's
41:49new and how things work it actually breaks
41:52down everything you ever need to know the
41:55very final
41:55tip i'll give you this i'll give this tip
41:57to you for free when you've clicked into
41:59the right
41:59version of the documentation if you go to
42:02the search and then search for a topic it's
42:04only
42:04searching in that version for notes it's
42:07not searching across all notes it's just
42:09searching
42:10in that version that is such an invaluable
42:12thing because so often people will go and
42:14if i go back
42:15to this page they'll go to this very top
42:18search bar here which searches everything
42:20in tableau
42:21documentation and that often tends to
42:23return the latest version and many people
42:25aren't on the
42:26latest version most organizations tend to
42:28be one or two versions behind so they're
42:30actually often
42:31well they're not always reading the wrong
42:33documentation but if something small has
42:36changed
42:36in that version they could be reading the
42:37wrong instructions because there's
42:39something different
42:39that's changed so that's how to find the
42:42correct documentation if you're going
42:43somewhere where
42:44there's not going to be internet where it's
42:47unreliable grab the pdf and save it in e
42:48vernote
42:49save it on your phone and you can search
42:51the pdf instead and i do this i'm a
42:53consultant i have an
42:55offline version of uh these saved in my
42:57note-taking tool and essentially i could go
43:00in there and search
43:01that and that searches inside of the pdf
43:03for me and then i can get the notes but you
43:05know the
43:05internet's pretty good nowadays we don't
43:07have to worry about offline nodes too much
43:09but yeah that's
43:09how to find the right version of the
43:11documentation and just make sure that you
43:13know how to use it
43:14accordingly search control find on the page
43:16and you're pretty much good to go so let's
43:19go ahead
43:19and cross that out and let's get actually
43:23stuck in um with this uh session so here
43:26this time i'm
43:27on my mac just so everyone's benefit i'm on
43:30my mac and um everything looks exactly the
43:33same maybe
43:34sort of mac specific things are on this
43:36particular page and you can see that i have
43:38this connection
43:39pane on the left hand side okay and this
43:41connection pane is pretty important because
43:44depending on what
43:44you're trying to connect to you need to go
43:46to the right section to select that file
43:49for argument
43:49sake let's say that i want to connect to a
43:51csv file like a text file with some
43:53information in it
43:54i can go ahead here and select text and
43:57what it will do is it'll open up my uh you
43:59know connection
43:59window a file window sorry and you'll see
44:02here that at the bottom it's looking for
44:04these types
44:05of files so if you're not sure what type of
44:07file tablet is expecting to find when you
44:08select an
44:09option you can just go down here to the
44:10bottom and on windows it's pretty much the
44:12same but it
44:13just looks like a windows interface it will
44:15tell you what files it's looking for and
44:16that's why
44:17these are all grayed out because none of
44:19these files match the criteria of this list
44:22and that's
44:22essentially what you need to sort of look
44:25out for now how do you know the file
44:26extensions for these
44:28things well it's just a little bit of
44:30experience like excel is dot xlsx or dot x
44:33ls or whatever
44:35whatever excel has been over the years that
44:37's what it's going to be that's a very well
44:38known
44:39file format text files on the hand-to-hand
44:41are a little bit a little bit broader you
44:43can have
44:44dot text csv tab tsv tsv is tab separated
44:48values csv is comma separated values and it
44:52goes on and
44:53on okay the json files now this is a web
44:56optimized format so you can see here it's
44:59only looking for
45:00one specific file i'm looking right here if
45:02you're wondering where i'm looking i'm just
45:03looking here
45:04where it says a json file and that's one
45:07specific format that's known as javascript
45:10object notation
45:11i think that's what no javascript yeah it
45:13is javascript object notation and what that
45:17means
45:17is essentially it's data stored in a
45:19specific way typically from web-based
45:21systems so if you go and
45:22export something from an internet-based
45:24system and just ask for the raw data
45:26typically it will give
45:27it to you in json so you can connect
45:29directly to that as well i hit cancel you
45:31can connect to pdfs
45:33now this is a bit hit and miss the pdf
45:35scraping you know it's got a capability
45:37built into tableau
45:38that uses a scraper that goes and looks
45:41into the pdf and tries to find the data
45:43across multiple
45:44pages but it can be hit and miss it's not
45:46always reliable so try it if your pdf has
45:48data you think
45:49tableau can grab it try it first you might
45:51save yourself a ton of time copying and
45:53pasting but
45:54if it doesn't work then yeah you might have
45:55to resort to something a little bit more
45:56advanced or
45:57simpler just copy and paste yourself
46:00spatial files are quite an interesting
46:02addition to tableau
46:04they've been in tableau forever i don't
46:06know why i say addition but they can be
46:08connected in sort
46:09of a couple of ways now spatial files are
46:12typically this whole range of files i won't
46:15go through each and every one of them
46:16explaining them the ones you're typically
46:18going to see use
46:19commonly with tableau are these esri shape
46:23files dot shp gr json files which can come
46:26from web
46:27applications like google maps and so on and
46:29so forth and then you've got um kml files
46:33and a
46:33couple of other files that sometimes come
46:36out of a similar system so kml came that
46:39and you might have
46:40this mif and tab as well those are very
46:42specific and then zip files typically also
46:45contain uh
46:46spatial data within them as a package and
46:49that's why it comes as a zip file so table
46:50au is able to
46:51sort of work with all of that and that's
46:53why here you can actually see that it's
46:54highlighting the
46:55files it can see so all this time i've been
46:57going through the files it's not been
46:59capable of
47:00connecting to them here you can see that it
47:02's happy to connect to these two files so
47:04let's go
47:06ahead and find some data to connect to let
47:08's go ahead and to do this i'm just going to
47:10go to a
47:11website and try and find some data i wanted
47:12to give you sort of an honest experience of
47:14connecting
47:15to data just found on some sort of website
47:17so i'll go to kaggle kaggle's really really
47:20good
47:20it's gone to a data set that i used a long
47:23time ago so let's go back and let's go to
47:25the data
47:26sense tab and we'll try and see if we can
47:28filter this and you can filter by specific
47:32file types
47:32let's just select the csv and hit apply and
47:35you get sort of a list of different files
47:38and i'll
47:38connect to this top 100 spotify songs this
47:41looks pretty good and you can get a little
47:44preview of
47:44the data so let's go ahead and download
47:46this it looks it looks pretty small but let
47:49's go ahead
47:49and download it anyway oh i need to
47:51register all right let's go ahead and sign
47:53in with google
47:54and once we've done that i should be able
47:57to download this let's go ahead and do that
48:00and yeah i'll save it to my desktop just to
48:03keep things nice and easy once it's on my
48:06desktop i'll
48:07show it in the finder and i will unzip it
48:11okay so now that it's been unzipped let's
48:14where is
48:15there is it gone uh let's see where is my
48:18where has it put the file and it doesn't
48:24seem to be
48:26showing up let's click out and click back
48:28in right let's try this let's just i'm
48:30pretty sure it's on
48:31my desktop so let's just go try and find it
48:33it's a csv file so if i select text file
48:36and i go to my
48:36desktop uh you can see here there it is a
48:40list of most streamed songs on spotify.csv
48:44and if i just
48:44click out of it you can see all these other
48:46files don't match that criteria that file
48:49does i select
48:50open and you go into what i call the
48:52connection interface now let me just give
48:54you a quick
48:55overview of this interface the connection
48:57interface is broken into what i call three
48:59sections you've got the preview section on
49:01the bottom the reason i start with the
49:02previous
49:03because people always want to see something
49:05familiar first so this is where to go to
49:06see
49:06your data that you've just connected to you
49:09get a list of the the field names on the
49:12left hand side
49:12of that preview pane so you can see what
49:15that is as well and then on the top you
49:17have what is called
49:18i'm going to call it the data modeling
49:20windows oh sorry didn't like that so let me
49:23take my watch
49:24up so it doesn't try and interfere with the
49:26live stream this is called the data
49:28modeling window
49:30and in this window you can essentially
49:33build data models and work with your data i
49:36'm trying so hard
49:37not to get into really advanced topics so
49:40bear with me but i'll explain what a data
49:42model is very
49:43very briefly in a second you don't need to
49:45worry about it and on the left you have
49:47what is
49:48essentially a list of your connections and
49:50the resources that you can bring into your
49:52connection
49:52and use okay so what is the workflow for
49:55connecting to data well as soon as you
49:57connect to data the
49:58first thing you should look for is what is
50:00the connection called this is essentially
50:02going to
50:02match the name of your file and if you want
50:05to you can change this the easiest way to
50:06change this is
50:07to double click here at the top and you can
50:10change the name i'll call this spotify spot
50:13ify hit enter
50:14and you'll see that that changes but it's
50:17not going to change the actual name of the
50:20file that
50:20i'm connecting to yeah so the name of the
50:22connection is changed up here but it's not
50:24going to change the name of the file that i
50:26'm actually connected to that is always
50:27going to
50:28be the name of the file and once i've
50:30connected to the file just below it i'll
50:32highlight this in red
50:34you have essentially the different things
50:37that can be in that file so when we connect
50:39to an excel
50:40file soon you'll see that this is slightly
50:44different but here i've just got this one
50:46file here that you can see list of most um
50:48listen to songs on spotify which is
50:51essentially the file
50:51the csv file and then on the bottom i'll
50:54highlight this in uh green you have
50:57essentially a couple of
50:58new features so you have the union which
51:00allows you to bring dates together we won't
51:02cover that
51:03today that is again it's not really an
51:05advanced topic but it's just not sort of
51:07pertinent in this
51:08particular uh sort of crash course and then
51:11the new table extension which really is
51:13advanced
51:14don't need to don't need to worry about
51:16that at all but very briefly this allows
51:18you to use
51:19um analytical applications to bring in data
51:22from other systems like python and r to
51:25bring data
51:25alongside your normal data okay so that's
51:28the left hand side of the connection window
51:30now when
51:31you've done that let me go ahead and remove
51:32this when you've connected to your window
51:34you see when
51:35tableau automatically does something for
51:37you when you connect the first time it goes
51:38ahead and bring
51:39something into this space for you and as
51:42soon as you drop it down you get the
51:44preview we saw before
51:45so in essence when you connect to something
51:48for the first time it's already done for
51:49you and so
51:50you're probably thinking well what do i
51:51need to do well it's already been done for
51:53you it's right here
51:54but if you don't see that or if you want to
51:57bring in a second item what you need to do
51:59is just go
51:59ahead grab the file and bring it in and
52:02drop it in and now you get a preview the
52:04other thing is you
52:05might want to see your data in a sort of
52:08more spacious window and if i hover over
52:10the farm
52:11you can see there's a little tiny box that
52:13appears just here where i'm highlighting it
52:15's disappeared
52:15because i'm not hovering over it but now if
52:17i hover over it you can see it's right
52:19there this
52:19little tiny uh table icon and when you
52:21hover over it for long enough it says view
52:23data you can open
52:24it up and go ahead and view the data so if
52:27i just go ahead and drag this out oh it's
52:29not letting me
52:30drag it out there you go now let me drag it
52:32down nope it's not going to let me drag it
52:33down just
52:34going to let me drag it out that's
52:36absolutely fine i won't complain and it
52:38shows me the data
52:39so essentially you've got one two three
52:42four five columns okay now that i'm here it
52:45's important to
52:46notice a couple of things that tablet has
52:48done firstly it's gone ahead and looked at
52:51our data
52:51and understood that each column represents
52:54different types of data so types of data
52:56just
52:56mean numbers text values and you can see
53:00that it's calling this one abc this one abc
53:04and this one abc
53:05essentially it thinks that these three
53:08columns contain text okay now we can see
53:11that this column
53:12here contains dates so we're going to need
53:14to correct that we'll come back to that in
53:16a second
53:16the other thing though is that this column
53:19here called rank it's seeing contains
53:22numbers and you
53:23can see it's got a little hashtag for
53:25numerical values and the same again for
53:27streams in billions
53:28so although this number says 2059 i'm not
53:32sure if this 2059 either myths this is 2
53:36billion and 59
53:38or if this is 2059 billion i hate this kind
53:42of stuff i think this is 2 billion streams
53:45we can
53:45go on spotify and have a look but i'll just
53:46assume this is 2 point something billion
53:48streams okay
53:49so all of that information is called
53:52metadata metadata essentially information
53:54about data it's
53:56essentially the core information that tells
53:58you what is in your data and you can then
54:00use that
54:00metadata to make sure things behave the way
54:03they should for example numbers should be
54:05treated with
54:06numerical values text should be treated
54:08with text behavior and text values in
54:11essence okay so how
54:13do we change these well if i close this
54:15preview window you'll see that just over
54:17here on the
54:18bottom let me just bring this pane to the
54:20left i have the same preview that i've just
54:23seen but
54:23it only shows me the few 100 100 rows i
54:26know that because it says 100 rows right
54:29here so if i set
54:29that to a thousand and hit enter it will
54:31show me a thousand rows um it's still
54:33showing me 100 rows
54:34i don't know why it might be above on my
54:36mac version but it should show you whatever
54:39number
54:39of rows you type into that space now when i
54:42go to this column here at the top you can
54:44see that i can
54:44actually click on these as well so let me
54:47go to the date column here release date i'm
54:49just going
54:50to tell tableau look can you change this to
54:52another data type and when i click on that
54:54i get all the
54:55data types that are available so i get
54:57number whole numbers date time date string
55:00spatial
55:01boolean these are types of data and if you
55:03're not sure what these are go ahead and
55:06just google them
55:07they're pretty straightforward literally
55:08once you know them you know them you don't
55:10need to learn
55:10them again but they're pretty
55:12straightforward in this particular case i
55:15know that this column that
55:16i can just see right here when it says 29th
55:18of november that should be just a date
55:20there's no
55:21time there's no like 29th of november
55:23midday it's just a date so if i go ahead
55:26and click date
55:27tablet does something very smart it goes
55:30and processes all that text and tries to
55:32make sense
55:33of the day and because tableau is good it's
55:35actually gotten very good at that that i'm
55:37confident that it's got it right so you see
55:40here it says 29th of november 2019 i'm in
55:42the uk so
55:43this is the correct way of doing dates don
55:46't don't don't come at me if this looks
55:48completely wrong to
55:49you this is the correct way of doing dates
55:52as far as i'm concerned um and so uh now it
55:54's changed
55:55that to date you can see that we have a
55:57calendar item right there ready to go and
56:00this has been
56:00understood and everything's going to work
56:03nicely so we can go ahead and start using
56:05this in our
56:05visualization now if i wanted to bring
56:08another data set in i could but again this
56:10is a crash
56:11course is we're just going to work with
56:13single data sources for now um i've done
56:15many videos
56:15and other people have done many videos
56:17about how to bring two data sources
56:19together when you're
56:19doing that you're typically doing something
56:22called a union or a join and if you're
56:24working with
56:24tableau there's also this new concept
56:26called the data model i've also done a
56:27video on that so
56:28go and research that but for now assume you
56:31're connecting to one data source you've got
56:33one
56:34connection everything is set up nicely now
56:36we're ready to visualize our data what we
56:39can do is we
56:40can just go down here and tableau is kind
56:42of telling you this the whole time go to
56:44this step
56:45to go to the worksheet and start visual
56:47izing something okay so when i go ahead and
56:49click on
56:50the space where it says sheet one we're
56:52into the building window we can actually
56:54start building a
56:55data visualization okay and now i'll go
56:57through this in a second but i want to show
56:59you a couple
57:00of other ways of connecting to data as well
57:02so that's pretty much the flow for
57:03connecting to data
57:05now let's say you want to go back to the
57:07data connection window you maybe realize
57:09that something
57:10is wrong and you need to change the file
57:11well you can do that at any point just
57:13because you've
57:14started building the visualization doesn't
57:16mean you can't change what you've already
57:18connected to
57:18so to do that you just want to go back to
57:21this data source tab here so if i go ahead
57:23and select
57:24that it takes us back and we're pretty much
57:26golden we can just start changing
57:28everything again we can
57:29rename it work with it but everything's
57:31going to work as you'd expect and it's
57:33going to be pretty
57:34straightforward so that's essentially the
57:36first example of connecting to a file we're
57:38connected
57:39to a text file we're ready to work with it
57:40we're ready to visualize it we can kind of
57:42put a put a
57:43nib on that bow it off and say we know how
57:46to connect to text files okay the next file
57:48i want
57:48to show you is an excel file and excel
57:50files are the most common files you connect
57:53to in tableau
57:54i hate to say it people should be using
57:56databases but excel is just so common so
57:58this is what you're
57:58going to have to connect to so how do we
58:00connect to that well i'm going to show you
58:02how to do that
58:03having connected to one connection already
58:06you see if i go back here and i start
58:08trying to add
58:09a connection here tableau's going to get
58:10confused because it might think that we
58:12want to bring the
58:13data together we want to kind of put these
58:15two files together i don't want that at all
58:17i want a
58:18separate file in my workbook to work on a
58:21separate visualization completely so how do
58:24i do that well
58:25if i go back to sheet one let's say i've
58:26built a visualization you can see that here
58:29at the top
58:30i have a plus icon next to a cylinder now a
58:32cylinder is typically the icon they use for
58:35databases pretty much everywhere if i go
58:37ahead and click on that you'll see that i
58:39get the same
58:40window that we got when we're connecting to
58:43data at the start so that connection window
58:46it also
58:46lives here essentially it should be very
58:48familiar with it and this time i'm going to
58:50choose the
58:51microsoft excel file okay when we choose
58:54that i want to go over to my documents
58:56folder and i
58:57want to make you aware of a folder that
59:00tableau installs on your machine in pretty
59:02much every case
59:03unless you work in an enterprise
59:04organization where they've decided to take
59:07that file away
59:08from you and it's called my tableau
59:10repository this folder right here now this
59:13repository file
59:14comes with every installation of tableau
59:16and if you double click it you'll see that
59:17it actually
59:18has a few things it has some sample work
59:20books it has logs if you ever have an issue
59:22with tableau
59:23this is where it will drop them has data
59:25sources that you might have saved and it
59:27has a bunch of
59:28other things okay one of the things i like
59:30about this is in that folder you should
59:33have a another
59:34folder with the version of tableau you have
59:36installed now i only have 22.4 on this
59:38particular
59:39setup so i'll go ahead and double click
59:41that and then i'll go ahead into that file
59:43and i'll look
59:44at the english version of the data sources
59:47that i have and you should also find in
59:49your version
59:50of this folder in your documents folder
59:52this file here called eu superstore.xls now
59:56this is a great
59:57file because it allows me to show you
59:59something and i know for a fact that you
60:01should also have
60:02this file if you don't have this file i'll
60:04put a link to this file in the document so
60:07you can find
60:07it the thing to note though is that
60:10depending on your version of tableau these
60:12files are different
60:13so if we start visualizing something and
60:16you see a slightly different number don't
60:18worry we've all
60:19got the same data source it's just that
60:21they change them from version to version
60:23they may be
60:23tweak a number here tweak a number there
60:25sometimes the titles don't quite add up but
60:27generally
60:28speaking all the sort of columns are the
60:29same so just follow along with columns and
60:31as long as it
60:32looks the same you're in you're in good
60:34company and we've got two versions of the
60:36file we've got
60:36a european version and american version
60:38because most of the youtube audience is
60:40american i'll go
60:41ahead with american audience the second
60:43biggest country on my youtube channel is
60:46india there is
60:46no indian version of this maybe we should
60:48make one as a nice little side project let
60:49's make an
60:50indian superstore version with indian
60:52locations that are more specific to the ind
60:54ian market maybe
60:55we should do that let's go ahead and select
60:58the sample file select open and when we do
61:00that tableau
61:01thinks about it and it takes us back to the
61:03connection window so you're probably
61:05thinking
61:06well hold on last time we had the csv file
61:09where has that gone well it's not
61:11disappeared what it's
61:13done is it's created a new connection and
61:15the new connection allows you to basically
61:18switch between
61:19this connection and the previous one we
61:21made with the csv file and if you just go
61:22to this top little
61:23drop down you can see that the one we
61:25renamed i just go here you see the one we
61:28renamed previously
61:29called spotify is right there and if we
61:31click on it we go back to it and if we
61:32click on this
61:33cylinder again and go to the new one we've
61:35just connected to which is an excel file we
61:37go back to
61:38that so you can switch between all these
61:40different connections just right here okay
61:43now if i go back
61:44to the excel file you'll see that it says
61:46right here that it's an excel file let me
61:48change to my
61:48red annotator i prefer that now we've
61:51selected this excel file and in the excel
61:54file it has
61:55three tabs if you're familiar with excel
61:57you have tabs across the bottom you have uh
61:59well you just
62:00have tabs depends on what they are but each
62:02of them could contain information and so
62:04what table
62:05is telling me is that look this file
62:07contains three pieces of information has an
62:10orders table
62:10a people's table and a returns table and if
62:12i'm not sure what they look like i can of
62:14course
62:15remember i can go ahead and preview them
62:17just by clicking on those and i can see ah
62:19this data
62:20actually contains information about orders
62:22made at my pacific store let's go ahead to
62:24the people table
62:26connect to that also good returns connect
62:29to that also good so this just allows us to
62:32look at the
62:32data sources and understand what's going on
62:35okay now you'll notice that as i connected
62:38to each of
62:39those these icons changed i don't know if
62:41anyone noticed if you don't believe me re
62:43wind and look
62:44at the icons again these icons have changed
62:47and they've gone to a green uh square with
62:49a little
62:50sort of tag and the tag lets you know that
62:52this data is actually coming from a named
62:55range inside
62:56of that excel file if you're not familiar
62:58with name ranges i've done a whole video on
63:00this so go
63:00ahead and look at the video where i talk
63:02about name ranges and table i talk about
63:04this in a lot
63:05of depth but the key thing here is that
63:07when you're working in excel in fact let me
63:10just go
63:10to excel and i'll show you if i go to excel
63:13here i have it open if i say make a table
63:15uh let's make
63:16a oh my cursor is not working there we go
63:19let's make a table of uh fruits um i've got
63:22my annotator
63:22on as well so let's go ahead and say apple
63:26and pair okay and i could say this costs uh
63:2910 pounds
63:30very expensive apple and this costs five
63:32pounds okay now that's a piece of
63:34information that's data
63:35now if i highlight these okay and create
63:38what's called the name range if i just go
63:40to the data
63:41tab just up here and i can never remember
63:43how to do this where is the named range
63:45options
63:46the actual easy way to do this is just go
63:50to the home and format it as a table which
63:54is where is
63:55the format as a table options my god i'm
63:57really bad here well i found the name range
64:00options
64:01instead i can't get this dark mode version
64:03of excel um it's just clearly throwing me
64:06off so
64:07if i select the table selectify name you
64:09can see that it tells me the name range
64:11here it's
64:12just pointing to that sort of square if i
64:14select okay that becomes the named range
64:16and that is
64:16essentially what we have you can see here
64:19the name range is called apple and it
64:21starts with this row
64:22and that is essentially going to be visible
64:24in tab low as apple when i connect to this
64:27excel file and
64:28start working with it so that's what a
64:30named range is and uh people use them in
64:32organizations all the
64:33time to sort of section out data where you
64:35have multiple things on an excel page that
64:37's essentially
64:37how to connect to each and every one of
64:39those individual tables and if it doesn't
64:41exist you can
64:42go ahead and connect one and it allows you
64:44to pick out data from a page full of
64:45information okay but
64:47for now uh what i really want to look at is
64:50uh orders if i just scroll up you can see
64:52that we
64:53have the orders view over here what
64:55actually happened with this is the icons
64:57didn't change
64:57i scroll down that's what must have
64:59happened this interface is what is
65:01happening with tableau and
65:03interfaces recently honestly so this never
65:05used to scroll down this just used to move
65:07down to make
65:08space for it but it's deciding to scroll so
65:10it didn't change icons anyway here's the
65:12orders table
65:13to bring it in we just drag it in like i
65:15said showed you before and we get the same
65:17preview
65:17as we've had before our data is here it's
65:20pretty good we can customize any of these
65:22as well we can
65:24do anything we need to do and it's pretty
65:26much good now the final thing i'll show you
65:28is that
65:28there are some data prep capabilities in
65:31this window if i go to this little drop
65:34down you can
65:34see that i have the ability to split and do
65:37custom splits essentially break out the
65:39data
65:39and in some cases even pivot the data if i
65:42need to do that so in this case if i just
65:44select split
65:44tableau looks at that column of information
65:47and it automatically splits it out into
65:50three columns
65:50you can see here at the very end it's added
65:53them in and a little clue to let you know
65:55that those
65:55have been created here is that if you look
65:58here at the very very top just in this
66:01section you'll
66:02see that these have a blue marker and these
66:05don't have a marker the blue refers to this
66:09blue over
66:09here so when you're connecting to multiple
66:12things they might have different colors and
66:16those colors
66:16will show up on the columns to let you know
66:18which table they've come from that's
66:20basically it okay
66:21so that's why you don't get a blue icon
66:23here at the top because these have been
66:25created inside of
66:26tableau rather than just in general so now
66:29that we've done that we're pretty much good
66:32to go we
66:33can go ahead to sheet one as tableau hints
66:35us to so i'm just going down here selecting
66:37sheet one
66:38and we're back here ready to build some
66:40data ready to work with our visualization
66:42and we're pretty
66:43much good to go if i look here on the top
66:46left i now have two data sources spotify
66:48and superstore
66:50and that's pretty much everything you need
66:51to know about that okay the very last thing
66:54i'll show you
66:55how to connect to is a database so you've
66:57connected to a flat file you've connected
66:59to excel the last
67:00thing i'll show you is a database databases
67:02are pretty common at work so it would be
67:04pretty bad
67:05tutorial to show i'll show you that so let
67:08's go ahead and connect to a database that i
67:10have access
67:11to now to do this i need to be super
67:13careful that don't share my credentials on
67:15the screen so let me
67:16just give me one second and i just don't
67:19give you all my information to my database
67:21and i make sure
67:23that i have it in another window and i can
67:26type it in appropriately as and when i need
67:30to so let
67:31me just where where is this um where have i
67:33put this data honestly that should be more
67:36organized
67:37here we go so i think i think we're okay
67:39one thing i'm slightly concerned about is
67:42that i
67:42might have security settings on my database
67:44to stop me connecting because i'm not where
67:46i'm
67:46supposed to be long story short for
67:48security reasons um sometimes it's good to
67:51tell your
67:52database not to let you connect from
67:53certain locations because those aren't
67:55locations you're
67:55supposed to be connecting to the data so
67:57for this what i'm going to do i'm going to
68:00move this can i
68:00move this window to another window yes i'm
68:02not going to show you this until i filled
68:04it in because
68:04i don't want you guys getting all my
68:07database details so let me fill it in off
68:09screen apologies
68:10probably the worst this is the worst uh
68:13live streaming uh thing to do but you can't
68:16dynamically
68:17um fade out stuff i trust you guys won't be
68:20stealing my email and everything but
68:23i need to just be able to log into this
68:25database and do that so all i've done is i
68:29've typed in the
68:29credentials now i've actually done a video
68:31on how to connect to snowflake so you can
68:33go watch that
68:33video where i have blurred everything out
68:35but as soon as i connect to a database you
68:38'll see i get a
68:39different kind of window it's not like what
68:41we've seen before um for snowflake
68:43specifically i get
68:44what's called a warehouse and each database
68:46has its own sort of setup so you might get
68:48different
68:49things in you might have like a warehouse
68:50but warehouse means something else you
68:52might have a
68:53data lake you might have all of these terms
68:55you might have schema as well as an option
68:57that turns
68:58up in here depending on the database they
69:00're all slightly different this follows a
69:02terminology of
69:03that database so i'll go select my
69:04warehouse in snowflake warehouse just means
69:07how much computing
69:08power you want to use so i have one called
69:10compute this is my own database i use this
69:12to run this
69:12youtube channel and everything that goes on
69:15with my channel and then i've got a demo
69:18database
69:19tableau demo database with demo tableau
69:21data so if i go ahead and select that that
69:23works then i
69:24can go ahead and select the schema this is
69:26the public schema and in the public schema
69:29you can
69:29see that i have three pieces of information
69:31i have my employees table my invoices table
69:34and my orders
69:35table this is all dummy data so there's
69:37nothing sensitive here my orders table i
69:39can preview it
69:40just like i showed you before and it looks
69:42exactly the same so these options are just
69:44slightly
69:44different because i'm connecting to a
69:46different type of data source but if i go
69:47ahead and close
69:48this you'll see i also get an option to do
69:50custom sql now if you're the kind of person
69:53who just
69:53knows how to write their sql to connect to
69:55a data source you can actually go ahead and
69:57just bring
69:58that in and paste your sql in here and type
70:00we will go and run that query to return the
70:03data
70:03that comes back and use that in here the
70:06advantage is you could do a lot of data
70:09preparation in this
70:10window but a note about custom sql it can
70:12sometimes slow tableau down especially if
70:15you're using a
70:15live connection so just you know use it
70:17with caution and the other nice thing is
70:20with custom
70:20sql you can insert a parameter that's
70:22controlled by the user that actually runs
70:25in this window so
70:26if you've got a live connection you want to
70:28give the user the ability to choose some
70:30sort of
70:31variable from the database so your database
70:33is not chucking everything out the user you
70:35can actually
70:36use a parameter in this window to do that
70:38that's just worth noting but nonetheless
70:40same as always
70:41drag my orders table in it looks exactly
70:44the same as we've been using before a table
70:47there preview
70:48at the bottom ready to go go to sheet one
70:51exactly as you'd expect connected okay so
70:54we've got three
70:55connections we've got our snowflake
70:57connection we've got our excel connection
70:59and we've got our
70:59csv connection all three of them are up
71:02here at the top now you're probably
71:04wondering well great
71:05let's start visualizing our data let's
71:07start working with this and information
71:09well the
71:11tricky thing is actually we're not done and
71:13let me just sort of take a break to sort of
71:16check what
71:16i've covered here so the connection
71:18interface is done let's strike that out
71:20finding data to use
71:22i didn't really cover that so i'll come
71:24back to that connecting to data i kind of
71:26feel like i'm
71:26doing that now so i'll cross it out ahead
71:28of time and yeah the next thing we're going
71:31to come to is
71:32the tableau extracts you see the the
71:34easiest way to explain this without going
71:36into too much detail
71:37is that tableau extracts are an optimized
71:41format of data right now everything we're
71:44connected to
71:45is connecting live the way i know that is
71:48that each of these cylinders are just
71:50cylinders so
71:51these are all live connections what does
71:53that mean that means every time i do
71:55something in tableau
71:57tableau is actually going to that file and
71:58querying the information every time i do
72:01something
72:02with this particular connection it's going
72:03to snowflake querying the data and coming
72:05back
72:06now that's fine but if you're trying to
72:08build a dashboard at work that's actually
72:11not fine because
72:12what happens if the database goes down
72:14whilst you're building something what
72:16happens if you
72:16just want to build something quickly you
72:18don't want to worry about the latency and
72:19the networking
72:20issues in your organizations you just need
72:22to get on with work and so tableau has
72:24another way of
72:25capturing this which is essentially by
72:27taking a snapshot of the data what it does
72:30is it goes off
72:30to the data source it takes a snapshot but
72:33it remembers where it got the data from and
72:36when it
72:36takes that snapshot it means that it saves
72:38it into a more optimized format that allows
72:40you to do a
72:41little bit more with it and it also works
72:44considerably faster it's also a lot smaller
72:47so a
72:47good example if i took like let's say 200
72:50megabytes csv file like a text file tableau
72:53would compress
72:54that down to about 10 megabytes much much
72:57more portable much faster it's going to be
72:59much faster
73:00than opening a text file and looking
73:02through and querying its information and
73:04the added benefit is
73:05that extracts also allow you to do certain
73:07things that you can't do with just normal
73:09connections
73:10again it's a little bit beyond the nature
73:12of this crash course but you can do a
73:14little bit more with
73:14it so how do you take an extract well there
73:17's a couple of ways if i go back to any one
73:20of these
73:21in this case let's go back to my excel file
73:24i can right click on it and i can select
73:26edit data
73:27source when i do that it takes me back to
73:29this window and i wanted to show you
73:30another way of
73:31coming back here just so that you know that
73:34you can do that okay now up here on the top
73:36right you
73:37can see there's an option that says extract
73:39i completely missed this before because i
73:41wanted
73:41to wait until i was here to kind of talk a
73:43bit about this and you can see the default
73:45option is
73:46live but what i'm saying is you should be
73:49using an extract okay and so let's have a
73:51look and see
73:52what happens when you switch over to the
73:54right hand side you see when you go to the
73:56right hand
73:57side it says extract will include all data
73:59it's not created the extract yet it's just
74:02telling you
74:02that this is going to include all data if
74:05you were to take one but here's the
74:07advantage you can
74:08change what data comes in you can change
74:10what data comes into your snapshot just by
74:12selecting edit
74:13and tabular gives you this window that
74:15allows you to choose what data you'd like
74:17to bring in
74:17don't worry too much about the stuff here
74:19at the top all you're paying attention to
74:21is the filters
74:22pane here in the bottom okay when you
74:25select add it shows you all the columns in
74:26your database so
74:27let's say i only wanted to bring in cells
74:29from a pacific subcategory i could go ahead
74:32and select
74:32okay choose that subcategory select okay
74:35and now i've limited my data to just the
74:38art data
74:39for my extract i've not deleted it from the
74:41database i've not deleted it from the file
74:44i've just brought in a tiny sample of that
74:46data because maybe this is all i'm
74:48analyzing if i
74:49select okay that's all fine and now when i
74:52go back to my visualization to start using
74:55it
74:55tablet actually asks you hey where would
74:58you like to save this extract and this is
75:01kind of confusing
75:01because you're probably thinking oh whoa
75:03whoa i thought you were going to save it in
75:04the workbook
75:05and in this particular file and you're
75:07going to take a copy of my data but in
75:09actual fact tabular
75:10does need to write the file somewhere it
75:12likes it's going to write the file so i
75:13always say to
75:14people look save it to your desktop because
75:16we're going to delete this later i'll show
75:18you why save
75:19it to your desktop and when it's done you
75:21know you have an extract when you go to the
75:24top left
75:24hand side here and it has two cylinders
75:27with an arrow going from the first one to
75:29the second one
75:30essentially it's telling you that it's
75:32taking an extract and now it's using that
75:34extract okay and
75:35so if i go and ask tableau hey what subc
75:37ategories do i have in my data i'll just go
75:39ahead and drag
75:40subcategory onto text you'll see the only
75:44data i have in that file is art but if i
75:47want to connect
75:48back to the live data let's say the
75:50database is back up and everything is great
75:52i can go back in
75:54right click untick the use extract option
75:57and all the data comes back okay so just by
76:00switching
76:01that on and off i can switch between
76:02whether i'm using my snapshot or whether i
76:04'm not using
76:05my snapshot okay now the other reason
76:07people use this particular extract feature
76:10is because they're
76:11only interested in a small part of the
76:13organization and other people use it to
76:15optimize the way they
76:16build their workbooks they want to make it
76:17go faster they want to make it easier and
76:19so again
76:19that's a really great way of doing that
76:22okay so that is an extract in a nutshell
76:25there's definitely
76:26more i could talk about with extracts it's
76:28definitely more you can learn go ahead and
76:30google
76:30the topic look on youtube i've done videos
76:33other people have done great videos on this
76:35and go ahead and check them out in the
76:37recorded version i'll maybe put up some
76:39links to some
76:39resources that i think are fantastic that i
76:41've not made other people have made but i
76:43think you should
76:43check out okay great stuff so we've created
76:47an extract we could do the same with this
76:50first one
76:50as well and this is another way of creating
76:52an extract you can just right click the
76:54file here
76:55select extract and you get the same window
76:57this time here rather than in the
76:59connection window
77:00you could add a filter in this case i won't
77:02i'll go down to the bottom right select
77:05extract
77:05will ask me where i want to save it again i
77:08hit my desktop save and you'll see that
77:11this extract
77:12has a different time zone to the underlying
77:14data essentially tablo is looking at the
77:16metadata
77:17to understand hey what's going on here i'm
77:19fine with this i know this is fine i'll
77:21select and
77:22show again click ok and again we have an
77:24extract right there so pretty easy pretty
77:27simple now at
77:29this point this is when i start to save the
77:31work okay i don't want to go through all
77:33this effort
77:33making connections and then forget to save
77:36it so if i click on tablo and i go to file
77:39at the very
77:39top i can go ahead and save as now if i
77:42click save it'll just go ahead and open
77:45this window
77:46and it'll want to save it in my tablo
77:48repository i don't want it in my tablo
77:49repository i want it
77:51on my desktop so let's go ahead and select
77:53my desktop and you'll see it gives it a
77:54name called
77:55book one dot t w b i'll call it live stream
77:58okay giving it the file live stream now
78:02this file
78:03extension is super important so many people
78:07make this mistake so pay attention okay a
78:10twb file is
78:12just known as a tablo workbook at the
78:15bottom there's another type called a
78:17packaged workbook
78:18okay and the package workbook not only
78:21contains your data visualization but it
78:24also contains your
78:25extracts and any data sources as well as
78:27assets like icons and images those all get
78:30packaged into
78:31a twb x file and so most people i think
78:34generally want to save everything in one
78:37file they don't
78:39want to save it in lots of different places
78:40then have to go back and find it and relink
78:42it
78:42especially if we're about to delete the
78:44extract from our desktop we just want to go
78:46back here
78:47and save everything in one file so if i go
78:49ahead and select that we're going to save
78:51it as a twb
78:52x file hit save it will go ahead save it i
78:55know that's saved because here at the top
78:58ah just the annotator has kind of gone in
79:00the way here at the top you can see it's
79:02called live stream
79:03and now that's saved okay and so what that
79:07allows me to do if i find my um
79:10uh little icon is i can go ahead and i can
79:13now safely delete these two because they
79:17are actually
79:18now in my workbook they've been saved as a
79:20package workbook if they weren't saved it
79:23would just save
79:24a twb and the next time i try and go and do
79:26something it would still be connecting to
79:29the
79:30local files and it would basically have a
79:31panic attack because it's saying hey i had
79:34extract they
79:35were on the desktop where have they gone
79:38and so to fix that the only way you can
79:40kind of get those
79:40back is to go back connect to the original
79:43data source and regenerate the extract
79:45essentially this
79:46option here is a couple of options
79:47sometimes here you can use to regenerate
79:49the extract refresh
79:50re-update tablo will kind of give you a
79:52hint as to what it needs to do but that's
79:54where you find
79:55these sections you can mess around with
79:57these options you know figure out what they
79:59do google
80:00them whatever but we won't cover that in
80:02much detail go check out the videos on
80:03extracts that
80:04have been done by the community okay and
80:06now even though i've got my extract in my
80:08workbook i can go
80:10go ahead right click onto cues extract and
80:12it brings everything back in because what
80:14it now
80:14does is it goes to find the extract
80:16realizes it's not there then goes to the
80:18main file and brings
80:19all the data in if i go ahead and extract
80:22the data this time removing my filter for
80:25subcategory and
80:27bringing everything in select extract we
80:29take the extract you're probably wondering
80:31why am i
80:32repeating extracts because people don't get
80:34it so just want to make absolutely crystal
80:37clear that
80:38you understand what extracts are okay the
80:41very final thing you can see a tick mark on
80:43the data
80:44source that i'm currently using okay if i
80:46go to another data source you'll see that i
80:48don't get
80:49that tick mark because i haven't brought
80:51anything in and everything goes orange if
80:52you're into that
80:53zone you're skipping way ahead just go back
80:56to the data source you were using select
80:58that
80:59clear the sheet just removing everything or
81:02if i go back one step there's a back button
81:05right here
81:05if i go back one step you can just go ahead
81:08here and select clear the sheets that will
81:11clear
81:12everything and now when i switch to another
81:14data source that blue stick isn't there and
81:16nothing's
81:16changing orange okay you just want to make
81:18sure you don't get confused this is exactly
81:20what
81:20happens to people and they get so confused
81:22and they realize they're creating blends
81:24and joins or
81:25gets crazy so make sure you're working on
81:27the data source you're supposed to be
81:29working on
81:30by just making sure you clear the sheet or
81:32you create a new sheet if you need to
81:34okay so that is an extract i've covered
81:38extracts in pretty pretty good depth okay
81:44now the next thing to sort of touch on is
81:46the interface i mean come on i've gone
81:49right into
81:49tableau and i've not shown you any sort of
81:52interface whatsoever so let's go ahead and
81:56actually explain this interface a bit more
81:58i'll move my annotation tools out the way
82:00let's put
82:00them in the middle of the page because then
82:02they can't really get in the way okay so
82:04you've
82:04connected to tableau at the very top you've
82:07got what i call the toolbar okay the
82:09toolbar has a
82:10bunch of different things often you'll see
82:12me going to this toolbar throughout today i
82:14'll even
82:14forget to just mention that i'm going there
82:16because for me it's muscle memory i've just
82:17sort
82:18of gotten used to going up there and doing
82:20different things it's got some of the most
82:22commonly used things that you do with table
82:24au if you hover over each one of them it
82:26tells you what
82:26they are i don't want to go through each
82:28and every one of them but essentially you
82:29've got the back
82:30and forward button okay the the back button
82:33in tableau is very good like it it will go
82:36back as
82:36far as you need to pretty much since you've
82:38opened the farm so be very careful how far
82:40back you get
82:41really make sure you go to the right step
82:43and don't undo your work and then start
82:45doing something
82:45and then lose the sort of forward history
82:47that it's actually built up you've got a
82:50couple of
82:50other options you've got the data
82:52connection window you've seen this cylinder
82:53i've got the
82:54pause button don't worry about the pause
82:56button just yet if you're working with
82:58really large data
82:59sets research what this button does and you
83:01've got the sheet option so clearing the
83:03sheets copying
83:04the formatting all of that is up here you
83:07've got the ability to rotate charts some
83:10highlighting
83:11grouping formatting uh views setting the
83:14screen to fit different sizes all of that
83:17is up here
83:17we'll cover it as we start to get through
83:21the session now the left hand side is
83:24called the data
83:26pane now the data pane has surprise
83:28surprise your data and each of the columns
83:31in your data
83:32sits on this sort of um left hand side pane
83:35and you can remember we have these icons
83:38that basically
83:38talked about different data types well
83:40those exist here too if i just highlight
83:42them in green
83:43all the data types are right there and you
83:45can hover over them and look at them or you
83:47can click
83:47on them and change them if you believe they
83:50're wrong the other thing is you will see
83:52that tableau
83:52split this data into sort of two arbitrary
83:55groups and some are blue and some are green
83:57okay well
83:59this is nothing to do with the types of
84:01columns they are okay people often make
84:03that mistake they
84:04say oh it's because it's a difference
84:06between um you know dimensions and measures
84:08which is what
84:08these are actually called so these are
84:10typically called dimensions in blue and in
84:13green we have
84:13measures okay that is actually isn't the
84:17reason why you can have a a dimension turn
84:20into something
84:21like a measure for example a date can both
84:24be dimension and a measure you can have
84:262020 the
84:27dimension the actual year and you can have
84:302020 as a time scale as in a line that
84:33becomes continuous
84:34or a measure essentially so in essence um
84:38let's not let's not get into that just yet
84:42well when we
84:42look at dates we'll go into that into more
84:45depth okay but the thing to note is
84:47obviously when you
84:48click on each one of these you can change
84:50the data type and you can even um it's
84:52actually not letting
84:53me do that why is it always coming up with
84:56a geographic role that is really bizarre
84:58what is
85:00going on today look at this that i swear
85:02that never happens normally you're able to
85:05change this okay
85:06so there's obviously some changes going on
85:09in tableau either i'm just i found just
85:11completely
85:11out of um kilter but previously when you
85:14clicked on this you could change the data
85:16type okay now
85:17if it's not letting you do that you can
85:19actually go down into this option and
85:21change the way it
85:22works you've got default properties you've
85:24got different things depending on what the
85:26field is
85:26you can obviously go down into this little
85:28triangle and you get a whole bunch of
85:29options
85:30that let you change what it does okay and
85:33this is pretty much consistent with every
85:35single field
85:35whatever field i hover on you'll see this
85:38this little tiny arrow let's see if i can
85:40isolate it
85:40now i can't isolate it because it
85:41disappears when i hover over but this
85:43little tiny arrow on the
85:44right hand side of each pill as i select it
85:46gives you more options and in those options
85:48you can
85:49change a bunch of different things okay now
85:51the power of that is if you realize
85:54something's wrong
85:55you can change it the other thing you can
85:57do is if you realize something wrong but
85:59you're not sure
86:00ira is recommend right click on one of
86:02these duplicate it and you create a second
86:04item
86:04then you can try whatever you need to do
86:06with the second item but you're not going
86:08to break the main
86:09item essentially what tableau has done is
86:11it's created a calculation we'll go into
86:13calculations
86:14a little later on but you can see here that
86:16it's got a little equal signs next to the
86:19abc
86:19that means it's a calculation okay now the
86:22other pane that you probably don't realize
86:26is there
86:26it's called the analytics pane you can just
86:28see it here i'm highlighting it in green at
86:30the top
86:30and when you switch to it you get some of
86:33these aggregation types and the ability to
86:36add things
86:36like reference lines and some of the
86:38statistical models as well we'll come to
86:40this probably in
86:41another stream but in essence the only time
86:43we really want to be using this is if you
86:45're using
86:45reference lines we'll touch on this today
86:47how to use them and what are the options
86:49but we won't go
86:50into a lot of depth so we're just touching
86:51them briefly i'll show you where everything
86:53is and then
86:53we'll kind of skip along okay and then
86:56after you've sort of looked at this left
86:58hand side of
86:59the data in the analytics pane you've got
87:01the bottom section which is essentially
87:03where the
87:03data source and the sheets live so all the
87:05sheets all the dashboards you click through
87:07them here on
87:08the bottom on the very very very bottom you
87:11can probably see here that it's my name
87:13that's
87:14essentially me logged into tablo server and
87:16that's why that my name is coming through
87:18there and then
87:20over here in the middle you can see that i
87:23have two one three things the pages shelf
87:27the filter
87:27shelf the mark shelf the two things to pay
87:29attention to are the filters essentially
87:31allows
87:32you to filter things like you would in
87:33excel and the marks pane which controls
87:35charts we'll come
87:36to that very soon and then on the top i'll
87:39highlight these in red you've got columns
87:42and
87:42rows this is an important thing that
87:44controls charts in tableau and a very very
87:47final thing
87:47is you've got the canvas here you can see
87:49the whole general space that's list and
87:52sheet one
87:52sheet two that's just here in the middle
87:55and those are pretty much all the arrows so
87:58when i refer to
87:59columns rows shelf filter shelf marks shelf
88:01those are the things i'm referring to i'm
88:04referring to
88:04these sections of tableau you can move them
88:07around for example if you want the marks
88:09pane further up
88:10you can do that you can bring the pages off
88:12here at the bottom totally up to you you
88:14don't have to
88:15leave them as is most people leave them as
88:16is i i leave them as is because you know i
88:18do tutorials
88:19so i want them to stay the same but broadly
88:21speaking and that's where everything is the
88:24last
88:24thing which i hate using i hate people
88:26using this not because i think you shouldn
88:29't but because
88:30people use it as a crutch and i think if
88:31you learn tableau you shouldn't need to use
88:33this but
88:34show me show me allows you to understand
88:36how to build charts the problem is most
88:39people end up
88:40basically using it forever and always
88:42getting it to build their charts for them
88:45okay so that's the
88:46interface in a nutshell that's everything
88:48you need to know everything i'm going to be
88:49calling out will
88:50be in these areas when we go to a new
88:52interface i'll keep showing you the
88:53introduction as well so
88:54you can understand it but that's pretty
88:58much it that's everything in one okay okay
89:01so i've covered
89:02i've covered the main interface now the
89:05last thing i haven't done is finding data
89:07to use this is a bit
89:09it's a bit of a topic slightly out of out
89:10of kilter i don't know why i put it there
89:12because
89:13i should have put at the end or something
89:15but um the common places to find data sets
89:18actually if
89:18i go back to tableau public and i go to the
89:21resources tab you can get the sample data
89:24and
89:24here they have a list of businesses and
89:26sample data you can get started with so if
89:28you're just
89:29learning this is a really good place to
89:30just go and find some assets that you can
89:33use straight
89:33away and just you know ignore kind of all
89:35the hassle of having to clean the data
89:37whatever
89:38everything is just good to go this is a
89:39really good place the other place is of
89:41course kaggle
89:42kaggle is great for um sort of openly
89:44available data sets and everything that you
89:47can kind of go
89:48to the communities talking about people
89:50like to sort of dump data sets on there so
89:52that's a great
89:52place to go and find something you may be
89:54passionate about and start working on it
89:57the
89:57other thing is if i go back to tableau
89:59public you've got these community
90:01challenges and resources
90:02and um let's let's see if i can find these
90:06so if i go to the let's go to the tableau
90:10community page
90:10or not tab like public tableau community um
90:15tableau community wrong place uh
90:24no this is not what i was looking for uh if
90:26i go to this page this page is on the table
90:29au home page
90:30um you can find community projects there
90:34you go community projects and in the
90:38community projects
90:39there are a couple of projects that give
90:41you data sets to use on a weekly basis so
90:44makeover monday
90:44run by andy kreebel um allows you to do
90:47that i think it's andy kreebel and even mur
90:49ray i think
90:49they're both doing it again it's gone
90:51through sort of different hosts over the
90:53years but i think it's
90:54andy and eva at the moment workout wed
90:56nesday started by andy but i think hosted
90:58now by a bunch
90:58of people from the community this is
91:00basically a weekly challenge where you can
91:02download a data set
91:03and then they try and give you something to
91:04recreate in tableau and you can see how it
91:06's done
91:07and if you don't know how to do it you can
91:08just look at the answers if you do know how
91:10to do it
91:10you can kind of give yourself a challenge
91:12of figuring it out and then there's a bunch
91:14of other
91:14sort of opportunities here i won't go into
91:16all of them but all of them are fantastic
91:18they're really
91:19really good and i think they're a great
91:21sort of learning resource for understanding
91:24where to go
91:25and find data that just allows you to get
91:27into tableau some of these are not tableau
91:29specific
91:29either some of these have data sources and
91:32data sets for other tools like power bi if
91:34you're into
91:35sql some of them that challenges do get
91:37done in sql as well i'm not in that sort of
91:39world so i
91:40don't know too much about that but
91:42nonetheless you can go and find great data
91:43sets from these places
91:45the other thing is the internet the
91:46internet just has lots of different data
91:47sources that you can
91:48use as well so that's pretty much a good
91:51thing to go to all right let's go ahead and
91:53strike this out
91:54right how does tableau work well i've shown
91:59you the interface and this is a very
92:03difficult question
92:04to answer but i'll answer it by telling you
92:07how the technology behind tableau works
92:10okay
92:11when tableau was created the biggest
92:14innovation about tableau was how it allowed
92:18any user
92:19to work with data without having to write
92:22sql so if i go to sample superstore here
92:26and i drag category onto rose and i drag
92:32sales onto where it says abc you'll see
92:36that i get the
92:38total sales for each category the
92:40innovation that tableau made was that i
92:43didn't need to know sql
92:46to create that query but of course if i'm
92:49connected to a database obviously something
92:52needs to be right in the sql because
92:54databases only work with sql so here's how
92:57tableau works
92:58if i go to the help menu and start a
93:00performance recording it's a bit of a
93:03random place to go but
93:04let's just just bear with me if i start a
93:07performance recording tableau starts
93:09basically recording what's going on in the
93:12background and now let me drag uh let's
93:15drag
93:15subcategory onto rose you'll see i get a
93:18list of subcategory and let me get sales
93:21and put it on
93:22columns instead you see where i dragged it
93:25changed the behavior of tableau it built me
93:28a bar chart
93:29and now if i stop the performance recording
93:32go back over to the help tab i don't know
93:35why it's
93:35under help but let's go ahead and stop the
93:37performance recording you'll find that
93:41tableau
93:42shows you what was going on in the
93:44background wait for it to load there it is
93:46it's coming up
93:47and here's the secret if i just drag the
93:52slider and i just go down to
93:58this executing the query when you drag and
94:01drop things in tableau what it's actually
94:04doing is
94:05writing sql for you in the background and
94:08sending that to the data source that's it
94:11that's essentially
94:12the core innovation behind tableau it's
94:15giving you a visual interface to run sql
94:18that's why the ip the
94:20technology behind tableau is called a vis q
94:23l essentially it's allowing you to write sql
94:26using
94:26a visualization sort of technique and so
94:30that's literally how tableau works when you
94:32drag and drop
94:34anything onto one of these core areas
94:37essentially anywhere here you are telling
94:40tableau how to build
94:42a chart and it's interpreting that and
94:44building the chart for you or you can tell
94:47it to change
94:48its behavior to do different things one of
94:51those two so you've just seen how i built a
94:53bar chart
94:54it's very simple okay let's clear the sheet
94:56again going up here to the toolbar click
94:58that let's try
95:00that again i want to do a bar chart showing
95:02the sales for each subcategory that's how
95:05the question
95:05might be framed at work i'd go ahead and
95:08drag the subcategory onto rows that puts it
95:11onto rows you
95:12can see that each subcategory is taking up
95:14a row that's how i remember it and then
95:16sales is what i
95:17want to put on the bar chart the total
95:19cells i'll go put it on columns and tableau
95:22understands that
95:23to mean hey let's draw you a bar chart for
95:25this particular chart type and notice this
95:28is just an
95:28alphabetical order i've not changed this um
95:31this is just how the data can comes in
95:33actually strictly
95:33speaking it's data source order which
95:35happens to be alphabetical order but that's
95:38just how this data
95:38source works now what if i want to change
95:42this well normally bar charts are vertical
95:46yeah that
95:46makes a lot of sense right you go from the
95:47bottom up not from the left to the right
95:49although
95:50sometimes you do have them like this how do
95:52i change that well it's exactly as you'd
95:55expect
95:55if i wanted the sales on rows and the subc
95:58ategories to be vertical i just swap them
96:01around
96:02so let's clear the sheet and do the exact
96:05opposite let's drag subcategory onto
96:08columns you'll see it
96:09goes across and then sales onto rows and
96:12now they're vertical okay so that's
96:15essentially the
96:16secret here and there's actually a quicker
96:18way of doing what i just did if you get it
96:20the wrong way
96:20round if you go up uh here to the uh very
96:23very top there's a no that's not the that's
96:26not the
96:27right annotation tool let's just go here if
96:30you go there there's a little sort of
96:32switch-a-roo
96:33icon i call it and if you click it it just
96:35swaps these two items around yeah so these
96:38two items
96:39that i'm hovering over and you can see my
96:41mouse moving over that's all it's swapping
96:43around okay
96:46excuse me so now that you you know that the
96:51next thing you might want to do is to
96:53change the way
96:54this bar looks normally you go from largest
96:56to smallest or smallest to largest right
96:58well again
96:59there's a bunch of icons to let you do that
97:01just here at the top you can see that i've
97:03got this
97:04descending and descending icon if i click
97:07that tablo interprets that and changes the
97:10way the
97:10chart is sorted and pretty much does it for
97:13you okay the other place you'll see that
97:16icon
97:17is you'll see it also here so you'll see
97:19tablo is telling you hey i've done a sort
97:21here
97:21it's going to show you that inside of what
97:24we call a pill in tablo okay this tablo
97:28hate this
97:28being called a pill but we'll just call it
97:31a pill this looks like a pill that's why it
97:33's called a
97:33pill and um it puts an icon there just to
97:35let you know that this particular sub
97:37category item has
97:38been sorted the logic is using sales values
97:41okay so it's sorted this by sales the other
97:44place i
97:45can see this is if i just go over here you
97:47'll see there's another sorting icon right
97:49there
97:49okay so if i go ahead and click on this
97:52icon over here on the left you'll see that
97:55it also does the
97:56same thing okay it just fritches them
97:58around perfect and if i go up here you'll
98:01see that oh
98:01the icon's disappeared why is that well
98:04when i was clicking through these sorts you
98:06'll see it
98:06appears again it appears again and if i
98:09click it a third time it goes back to the
98:12default sort order
98:13from the data source which means no sorting
98:17now the icon disappears if i go to the top
98:20i can
98:20actually go here manually to the sort
98:23option select it and i can change based on
98:27an item in
98:27my visualization so i select field sales
98:30sum and now you'll see it's doing the same
98:32thing
98:33descending or ascending so this little
98:36interface is like the advanced way of
98:38sorting
98:38and these two options here at the top are
98:41the quick way of sorting in essence these
98:44are just
98:44sort of the the fast way of doing things
98:46you just want to get things done quickly
98:48and if you really
98:48want to dial in the way something's sorted
98:50maybe you want to use something not
98:51individualization
98:52you can actually go here select that thing
98:55and now i'm sorting things in ascending
98:58order of profit
98:59from left to right okay so copies are
99:01actually the most profitable item but i'm
99:04actually showing the
99:05total sales okay so that's how you can sort
99:08of customize your sorting and kind of get
99:10get where
99:10you need to with tablet i'll go ahead and
99:13uh clear the sort again i'll do it just by
99:15clicking this i
99:16don't want to sort of confuse you by um uh
99:18going through and sort of clearing so we'll
99:23worry about
99:23that later um it's kind of i just want to
99:26try and keep this as simple as possible so
99:28that's how
99:29tablo works you drag and drop things onto
99:31the visualization it changes the way the
99:34chart works
99:35now so far everything we've been doing if
99:38you've noticed on the marks pane has had
99:42this terminology
99:42called automatic okay what that means is
99:45the tableau is automatically guessing which
99:48chart
99:48type you'd like to see okay so let's sort
99:51of see what happens when we change things
99:54up okay let's
99:55just move things a few around and see what
99:56tablet automatically things things should
99:58be if i move
100:01subcategory onto color you'll see that it
100:04actually colors each this one bar because
100:08we've got nothing
100:08in columns by each of the subcategories
100:10okay makes a lot of sense that's sort of
100:12cool to see still a
100:14bar chart good to know now let's put this
100:17on label you see when you put it on label
100:21tablet doesn't
100:22know what to do because you've got nothing
100:24in columns and rows so then it just says
100:26okay well
100:26let's let's put it on text and let's color
100:29the text by the subcategory you can see
100:31these are
100:32all different colors okay so tablo again
100:34has now changed this to an automatic t you
100:36can see it says
100:37t that means text you can see if i you don
100:40't actually uh get this when it says
100:42automatic but
100:43if you drop this drop down you can actually
100:45see the different chart types that it's
100:47automatically
100:47defaulting to just right here so text is
100:50what this one's on okay and if you
100:52understand this mechanic
100:54you can pretty much build any charts in
100:56tablet by understanding the combination of
100:59what you use in
100:59columns and rows and the marks pane you can
101:02get what you need so let's start by taking
101:05on some
101:06sort of common chart types okay so well we
101:09've done these two we've done how tablet
101:12works and
101:12we've built our first chart that was the
101:15bar chart let's strike that through and now
101:19let's kind of
101:19race through the chart types we're going to
101:21actually smash through this then i'll
101:23explain why i hate
101:24shaming right so a bar chart you've seen
101:27this already we'll drag the dimension and
101:30the thing
101:30we'd like to break up our bars with and we
101:33'll in this case i'll get subcategory i'll
101:35put it on
101:36columns because i want this to be a
101:37vertical bar chart and i'll drag the
101:39measure the numerical value
101:41that i'd like to use to control the size of
101:44the bars drag down to rows and we're pretty
101:46much golden
101:47okay now you can customize this you can
101:49change a few things maybe you want that
101:51sales value on the
101:52bar chart so people can see what it is let
101:54's go ahead and drag sales and this time you
101:56see there's
101:56an option here on the marks paint just put
101:58it on labels and there you go you get the
102:00value on the
102:01end of the labels okay uh maybe you'd like
102:03to change the formatting of this bar chart
102:05a little
102:06bit maybe you'd like this in dollars or
102:08pounds you can just right click select
102:10format and on the left
102:11hand side you get a formatting pane that's
102:13pretty comprehensive in there i'll go to
102:15numbers and i'll
102:16select currency and i'll say one no decimal
102:19places we'll do it in thousands thank you
102:22very much and
102:24we'll keep it as pounds uh we'll do two
102:26decimal places there you go and now you can
102:28see the
102:29formatting has stuck through but you're
102:30formatting the visualization we didn't
102:32format the axis
102:33to format the axis you can just see there's
102:35another option right there select the axis
102:38and
102:38now we can format that as well let's go to
102:41currency custom and now that's all good now
102:44you're probably
102:44wondering what surely tablet should do this
102:46automatically and absolutely you can you
102:49see what
102:49you can do let's open up a new sheet by
102:52going down here to pressing the plus sign
102:55on a new sheet just
102:56do that and it opens a new sheet what we
102:59can do is we can tell tableau that look
103:01this value here
103:02this sales value has a number format that
103:04it should observe across the whole data
103:06source
103:07so if we go to default properties and
103:09select number format you'll see that
103:11currency can be
103:12set to standard and it will just use the
103:14currency for the country or you can set it
103:16to custom we'll
103:17set it to english standard select okay and
103:20now if i build the same bar chart put that
103:22in columns
103:23put that on rows you'll see that it's using
103:25the formatting of pounds and even when i
103:28hover over
103:28the value inside of the tooltip is also
103:31pounds now this tooltip is nice you can see
103:35that it
103:35turns up whenever i hover over anything
103:37okay now you can do a lot with tooltips
103:39this is not the
103:40course for that but if i select the tooltip
103:42option here in the marks pane i can go in
103:45and customize
103:46that i can change the way it works and you
103:48know set it all up again i've done a video
103:51on it's
103:51about 40 minutes just on tooltips that you
103:54can go and sort of watch and check out it's
103:57going to teach
103:57you everything you need to know okay so
104:00that is basically how to set up a bar chart
104:02if you want
104:03to change the rotation you can just go
104:05ahead and do that now you might want to
104:07sort of take it up
104:08a notch you know boss things up you can
104:10have multiple things in your bar chart for
104:12example
104:13if i wanted to add a category as well as a
104:15subcategory i can just go ahead and drag
104:18category
104:18in front of subcategory and it creates
104:21sections and so this makes total sense
104:25essentially this
104:25is a hierarchy and in furniture we have
104:29these patific items now what happens if i
104:33get those
104:33two the wrong way around well you'll just
104:35see it if the data doesn't support the
104:36structure you think
104:37that's going to work you'll just see it in
104:39the visualization it just looks wrong okay
104:41so if
104:41there's a hierarchy things tend to work
104:43much better that way and you can set things
104:45up like this okay
104:46the very final thing i'll show you is i
104:48said i'd show you where the reference lines
104:50were
104:50anytime you see an axis for example this
104:52one on the left with numerical values if
104:54you right click
104:55on it you'll see the option to add a
104:57reference line and in tableau you get four
104:59options now
105:01most people understand reference lines but
105:04you can also create reference bands
105:06distributions
105:08and you can even mess around with box plots
105:10essentially this is where you create box
105:12and
105:12whisker plots in tableau but you can see if
105:14i create a line here this is going to give
105:16me the
105:17average for each section and i can actually
105:19change the level that this works at again
105:22lots of people
105:22have done videos on reference lines but in
105:25essence i can set it to draw a line across
105:27the entire
105:28table draw a line just in each section or
105:31draw a line on each line but it doesn't
105:34make sense to do
105:35the average of each line because it will
105:37just be the line so for average it doesn't
105:39make sense
105:40this makes more sense where per cell might
105:42make more sense is if you're using targets
105:45so you've
105:45got targets for each of these subcategories
105:48you could use this option okay so play
105:50around with
105:50these options this is not the video to sort
105:52of touch on that just going to let you know
105:54there's
105:55a lot you can do here play around with all
105:56these options they are as straightforward
105:58as they look
105:59and they're really really powerful okay so
106:01there's our bar chart we've set it up it
106:03looks beautiful
106:04one last thing one one very final thing you
106:06might do to customize this is to break
106:08these bars down
106:10based on something else let's say you want
106:13to show within each of these bars the
106:15shipping mode that
106:16was used so i'll go ahead and grab shipping
106:19mode and i'll drag it onto color and so
106:21what tableau
106:21will do is it will use the color to break
106:25down my bar and that color denotes the
106:28shipping mode okay
106:30and you can see i can hover over it all of
106:32that information's in the tooltip again if
106:34you want
106:34to customize the tooltip select the tool
106:36tips option and just open it okay now i see
106:39people
106:40trying to build charts like this using show
106:43me and it's just really hard to do you'll
106:45get lost
106:45you get confused and i'll end up with way
106:47too many things in the view you don't need
106:48to do it i've
106:49just shown you how you're just using
106:51columns and rows and the marks pane to
106:53control how everything
106:54works the ship modes control and the color
106:56the category and the subcategory are
106:58controlling the
106:59top level headers and the bottom basically
107:01the columns you see and the sales values
107:03are going
107:04across controlling the rows which gives us
107:06the size of the bars that's it okay let's
107:10go ahead
107:11and rename this let's call this bar chart
107:14perfect next chart pie chart wow the most
107:18dreaded chart in
107:20analytics this is dead easy okay so for
107:23this one i always recommend people listen
107:26stop using
107:27automatic immediately for this chart type
107:29you could get away with doing it but just
107:31switch this
107:32drop down here to pi once you've got pi it
107:35's just straightforward okay the size of the
107:38pie is going
107:39to be controlled by sales yeah that would
107:41give me the percentages and then the color
107:44of each section
107:45is going to be controlled by the category
107:47and there you go you have three equal
107:50sections but
107:51we don't have three equal proportions it
107:54can't be 33 look at the values these aren't
107:56exactly the same
107:57they're slightly different so what we need
108:00to do is also drag sales onto angle and now
108:03you can see
108:04that this actually now is starting to look
108:06a little bit better okay so the size
108:08actually denotes the
108:09size of the whole circle whereas this sales
108:12value on angle denotes the angle let's
108:15clear the sheet
108:16and let's try again with something with a
108:18little bit sort of more obvious sections
108:20let's try a
108:21dare i say it's shit mode okay so let's go
108:24back to pie chart and we'll put ship mode
108:28on color you
108:29can see we have four shipments i put sales
108:32on angle now you can see that working
108:34nicely
108:35and i could put sales on size but it's not
108:37really going to do something because the
108:39size sort of
108:40controls the whole size of the circle but
108:42nonetheless there you go that's it that's a
108:44pie
108:44chart super simple you might want the
108:46percentages on the end of it so how do you
108:48do that well you
108:50can do two things you can drag sales onto
108:52label but it's going to give you the whole
108:54number that's
108:55not very nice okay so what you can do is
108:57you select the one that says t the label
109:00and you
109:01want to go down here to quick table
109:03calculation and select percentage of total
109:06that gives you the
109:07percentage and now that you've done that
109:09you can right click on the visualization
109:12itself and select
109:13format and go to fields and select
109:15percentage of total sum of cells and here
109:19you can change the
109:20percentage okay so you can say percentage
109:23uh just no decimal places and that's it
109:25that's that's your
109:26pie chart done okay nice and easy donut
109:29chart oh god donut charts donut charts are
109:35popular so i'll
109:36show you how to do them let's go ahead and
109:39create a calculated field to do this i just
109:41need to bring
109:42this on screen and you don't need to pay
109:43attention to what's going on here you just
109:45want to do this
109:46create create a value you could actually
109:48even just do this the number one that's
109:50what you need to do
109:51we'll just call this calculation one hit
109:53apply hit okay now that we've done that we
109:57can go ahead and
109:58do this you can see when we put the number
110:00one it splits it out but what i want to do
110:02is actually
110:03find the average of one which is one then
110:06holding optional command or control i can't
110:09remember which
110:10it is on window i can create a duplicate
110:12okay oh is it letting me do that no it's
110:14not going to let
110:15me do that and why is it not letting me do
110:17that there we go i was holding the wrong
110:19key it's
110:19actually command for me on my windows
110:21machine and now that i've done that you see
110:24we have two
110:24and on the left we also have two so on the
110:29second one i'm going to go ahead and remove
110:32everything
110:32i'm just going to go ahead remove the color
110:34remove the size just going to remove
110:36everything okay we
110:37just remained with a circle i'll make the
110:40circle uh larger actually smaller and we'll
110:44change the
110:44color to white okay now you can't see it
110:47yeah it's just right there and the final
110:50trick is to go down
110:51to the second one and select dual axis okay
110:54and then you'll see oh it's nearly a donut
110:57and all
110:57you need to do is right click on this one
110:59and synchronize the axis and there is your
111:01donut chart
111:02the final thing to do is to set the axis to
111:05start and finish basically at the same
111:08point so you can
111:08set it to start at one and finish at one
111:11and then it sits in the middle and then
111:13once you've done
111:14that you can go ahead hide your header you
111:16've got a donut chart i don't know why it's
111:18that complex in
111:19tableau don't don't don't have a go at me
111:22it's just the way it is okay so there we go
111:24that's a
111:25donut chart in tableau so in this
111:27particular tab i use the trick of creating
111:30one and essentially i
111:31use a dual axis to create two calculations
111:33that sit on top of each other that are
111:35basically the
111:36same not as known as a hack i hate hacks i
111:38didn't want to show you a hack but someone
111:40asked for a
111:40donut chart so i had to show you the hack
111:43because it is required for tableau at least
111:45for now
111:46um i hate hacks so go check out this video
111:49hacks in tableau to find out why but this
111:53trick this
111:54this trick of creating the calculation one
111:56and using it to create instances that you
111:58can then
111:58you know use and use again and again
112:01actually happens quite a lot um let me show
112:03you like a
112:04real the real use case for it okay so let's
112:06let's say that i didn't use a dual axis
112:08here let's just
112:09split these two up and let's say that this
112:11color is actually going to be red just just
112:14for argument's
112:15sake okay now what i could do is i could
112:17put these two side by side like that and
112:20have them on the
112:22left and i could essentially keep going i
112:25could create more copies like this and all
112:28it's allowing
112:29me to do is to take the same copy of the
112:31same thing multiple times but now each of
112:34those pie
112:35charts could show different things in one
112:38chart so the example this one is colored by
112:41ship mode
112:42but i could color this one by subcategory
112:44and you'll see that it changes that one i
112:47could go
112:47to this one i could color this by product
112:50this is going to be nasty never do that
112:53please never do
112:54that i didn't teach you how to do this well
112:56i just did but i never tell anyone that i
112:58taught
112:58you how to do this um it's just not
113:00beautiful at all so this is why you use
113:02that hack to basically
113:04get the same instance of something and you
113:06can do something different with each
113:07instance now
113:09i'm not going to show you another hack that
113:11lets you to do the same thing in a cleaner
113:13way
113:14but recently a new feature with maps was
113:16introduced that allows you to do exactly
113:19that
113:20you could create multiple instances of
113:22something and using mapping placing you
113:24could essentially
113:25get them on different parts of your chart
113:27but again i didn't teach you this i don't
113:30teach
113:30people hacks apparently so let me let me
113:33delete these because we don't need all
113:35these extra ones
113:36we'll go ahead and do dual axis on that
113:40again and we'll uh we'll end up needing to
113:42show the axis
113:43where is the axis show the header there we
113:46go we'll synchronize the axis uh we'll edit
113:49the axis
113:51we'll set the fix so it's one the reason i
113:53'm doing this on one and one is so that both
113:56of the axis
113:57are perfectly aligned or is centered by
113:59only having one value on the axis it
114:02basically becomes
114:03centered go ahead deselect the header and
114:05then you can go ahead and format these
114:07lines to not show as
114:08well but essentially they're on top of each
114:10other and with the second one i'll just go
114:12ahead remove
114:13the color set it to smaller size oh uh why
114:15is it why is it changing both of them oh
114:18let's see
114:20what's going on here oh i think i um what
114:24is it doing here what did i do wrong so we
114:27've got this
114:29one here okay i just need to remove
114:31everything on this one then make that
114:34smaller and then that
114:36works yeah i lost my lost my trail of
114:38thought and then we can make this white and
114:40there you go it's
114:41a donut chart okay um line charts are super
114:46simple um first of all go get the measure
114:51or the numeric
114:52value you want to use so in this case you
114:55could use rows um and we just have the
114:57total sales in
114:58this particular case and then you want to
115:01create a line chart using something that
115:03would naturally
115:04create a line in a visualization so for
115:07this i'll go get the order date drop it in
115:11and we'll set
115:12this to day and you'll see it gets very
115:15noisy days too much let's go to month there
115:18you go that's a
115:19bit of a nicer line chart and you can
115:21change this again go to week that's pretty
115:24nice now i'm
115:26clicking this little toggle on the right
115:28and i'm just ignoring all of these options
115:30and i'm going
115:30straight down here to these dates i'm doing
115:32that because in the next step i'll just i
115:34'll explain
115:34why but for now um to create a line chart
115:37it's not going to work if you select
115:40something while it
115:41does work but what it's doing doesn't make
115:44obvious sense until i explain the next step
115:47which is
115:47discrete versus continuous items okay so
115:50for now i'm just going to keep it at month
115:52that makes way
115:53more sense it starts at the beginning of
115:55the data set ends at the end of the data
115:57set and everything's
115:58in the scale okay line chart super simple
116:00you measure the thing you're going to use
116:03to draw
116:03the line whether it's dates numerical
116:05values it's typically going to be two green
116:07things typically
116:09if it's not then you've probably tweaked
116:10the charts a little bit and we'll see some
116:12examples
116:12of that as well okay the next one is
116:16discrete versus continuous and i've termed
116:21this discrete
116:23versus continuous dates but strictly
116:25speaking this is just discrete versus
116:27continuous so
116:28you'll notice that here you have a bunch of
116:32blue and a bunch of green items okay
116:35earlier on i talked
116:36about this and i said it wasn't to do with
116:38anything to do with measures and dimensions
116:41it's instead to do with this concept of
116:44discrete versus continuous values and the
116:47dates are actually
116:48pretty good way of showing you showing you
116:49that so let's let's go ahead and do this
116:51let's drag cells
116:52onto rows and let's drag the order date
116:55onto columns now tablo has a pretty good
116:58understanding
116:59of dates so whenever i drag any date field
117:02it defaults to the year of that date unlike
117:04other
117:05tools where you have to go and build a like
117:06a date model you don't have to do that with
117:08tablo
117:09it understands dates pretty well and if i
117:11select this drop down you'll see that i get
117:14two selections
117:15i can use the year here at the top and i
117:17can use the year and a bunch of other
117:19values again here
117:20at the bottom and so if i select let's say
117:22this version of it yeah you see you still
117:25get a line
117:26chart but this item here at the top is blue
117:29however if i go down and select this year
117:31which
117:31also says 2015 he changes to green and now
117:35we get a scale and so the difference
117:38between these blue
117:39and green items is actually to do with the
117:41fact that discrete and continuous items
117:43behave behave
117:44differently in tableau discrete items tend
117:47to group data together so if i let's say
117:50choose 20
117:51choose a year and choose 2015 you'll see it
117:54grabs everything in 2019 and puts it into
117:57the bucket
117:58called 2019 but if i choose a continuous
118:02year it tends to want to draw a continuous
118:06scale so you
118:07can see here the bottom there is no bucket
118:09anymore it's got a scale 2019 to 2022 and
118:12so that allows me
118:13to essentially change the resolution of
118:15this scale but it always shows the full
118:17range of the scale
118:18every single time because this is a
118:20continuous item so continuous items will
118:22tend to want to
118:23give you a scale an axis and discrete items
118:26will tend to want to give you sort of a
118:29grouping
118:29like a box that fits everything that's
118:32inside of that box so just to pay attention
118:35to that switch
118:36to this version of the year you can see it
118:37says 2019 2020 21 these are all buckets
118:40there's no
118:40scale there's no time in that switch to
118:43this one you get the full scale as you go
118:46through now
118:47because i've switched to the full scale it
118:49draws a line in between the different years
118:52it doesn't
118:52sort of extrapolate the lines it just
118:54assumes that this is the only data point in
118:57the year and it
118:58draws the lines in the next year if i then
119:00go down here and select quarter that the
119:03axis stays the
119:04same length but now the axis gets more gran
119:06ular and now you get more information this
119:08is still
119:09continuous if i then go to quarter up here
119:13something different happens you see if we
119:17select
119:17quarter it goes it goes discrete as i as i
119:20described before but this time it's
119:23grouping up
119:24everything in every year in one quarter so
119:28this is not just q1 for the first year it's
119:31q1 for every
119:32year this is q2 for every year i can show
119:35you that by dragging order date in again
119:38and you can see
119:39this is the years at the top okay and now
119:42you've got two discrete dates and a
119:44continuous item the
119:46continuous item is generating the scale on
119:48the left hand side but the two discrete
119:50items here
119:51at the top are breaking up my line chart
119:54into different components okay and it's
119:57still a line
119:57chart still broadly creating what we need
120:00but each of these dots is sitting inside of
120:02a bucket the
120:03bucket is the quarter if i change that
120:06second one to a continuous one you'll see
120:09it gives me a full
120:10scale in between each quarters okay so that
120:14's like a very brief but important guide
120:18into the
120:19difference between the blue and the green
120:20fields that's why they're like those colors
120:22they make
120:23charts behave differently anything green
120:25will want to draw an axis anything blue
120:27will want to group
120:28everything into one particular dimension
120:31whether it's the year whatever that the the
120:34child of that
120:35dimension will be the grouping essentially
120:37whereas anything green will give you a
120:39continuous scale as
120:41much as the scale allows okay so knowing
120:44that you can sort of manipulate dates as we
120:47've just done
120:47we've drawn a couple of different line
120:49charts here but you can change the way
120:50these work just to kind
120:51of get different combinations working so
120:54maybe you want each these lines broken down
120:56by year but
120:57you'd like the continuous months inside of
120:59them so you can visualize these lines that
121:01's going to work
121:02really nicely what you could also do is you
121:04could take that visual separation instead
121:06of having them
121:06here on the chart you can drag the year and
121:09put it on color and now you'll still get a
121:12continuous
121:12scale because those months fall in specific
121:15places on the scale but it's now colored in
121:17different
121:17colors it's easy to see however if i go
121:22here to the month and i make these uh
121:26discrete you'll see
121:29that it groups all the months together so
121:31all the januaries go into that bucket all
121:33the febri is in
121:34that bucket but because i've put the year
121:36on color it's splitting out the lines by
121:38color okay so again
121:41the behavior changes uh the the the sorry
121:43the pills on the different parts of the
121:46chart changes
121:46the behavior and that behavior gives you
121:49the different chart types and with that
121:51logic you
121:51don't need to use show me you can pretty
121:53much get through most of what you need to
121:54know in tablet
121:55just by learning how this interaction works
121:58okay so let's have a look at this let's see
122:00what we've
122:00done so far so let's uh keep going the
122:04analytics pane and tablet so far we've done
122:09bar charts
122:10we've done donuts we've done line charts we
122:12've done uh different types of line chart
122:14with
122:14discrete and continuous let's uh build
122:17something different let's build another bar
122:20chart let's go
122:21ahead and build this by region let's go
122:23ahead and do that yes that's great and we
122:25'll build and we'll
122:26say profit that's pretty nice um but let's
122:29say i want to break that down by shipping
122:31mode and put
122:32that over there okay we've just sort of
122:34changed the dynamic a bit looks a bit
122:35different it's nice
122:36to see i'll go to the analytics pane just
122:39up here you can see where my mouse is
122:41shaking um you get
122:43different options that you can sort of
122:45bring into the visualization so if i wanted
122:47to create that
122:48reference line we saw before for average i
122:50could have just dragged that in and it
122:52gives me the same
122:52options i saw in that reference line pane
122:54just it's right here so i can go ahead drop
122:57it on the
122:57pane and now i get the average for each
122:59pane that's simple i can bring another one
123:01drop it
123:02on the table and i get another one for the
123:04table that's how it works so all of these
123:06are sort of
123:06aggregations and you can go ahead and oops
123:09you can go ahead and simply use them to
123:11change the way the
123:12chart works so that that's it that's all
123:13you need to know about the analytics pane
123:15for now
123:16as you drag them in it tells you where to
123:18put them and you can use that to sort of
123:21customize them if
123:21you want to edit them you can click on them
123:24and select edit and then you just get the
123:26same options
123:27i showed you earlier okay in the uh that's
123:31the analytics pane super simple and short
123:37um
123:40let's do a few more scatter plots so for a
123:43scatter plot you typically need two access
123:45so let's say we're going to have sales and
123:47we're going to have profit and we get one
123:51dot it's not
123:51very interesting what makes a scatter plot
123:54scatter plot is we can see different
123:55dimensions and where
123:56they sit on this scale so if we went and
123:59got segment and put it on detail we can see
124:03that we
124:03get three dots because there's three
124:06segments if i put that segment on color we
124:08get the same behavior
124:10but now each one is colored differently
124:13kind of handy now that i've got those
124:15segments colored
124:16i can go and go ahead and get something
124:18else i mean maybe go and get the products
124:20and put that
124:20on detail and it takes a while but now each
124:24product is colored it's a dot and it's
124:26colored
124:27using the segment okay and you can change
124:30that interaction around a bit there's no
124:33point putting
124:34color on product name because that's not
124:36going to be an attractive visualization but
124:38you can mess
124:39around with these sort of combinations to
124:40create different variants and don't forget
124:42you can still
124:42rotate your chart how you want okay you can
124:44just go ahead and do that and you're pretty
124:46much
124:46creating different customizations the shape
124:49of these circles can be customized too so
124:51let's say
124:52you want maybe filled circles instead you
124:55just go and select that you could do stars
124:58or here's a
124:59really cool trick you can drag the sub
125:02category and put that on shape and it will
125:06complain but
125:08it will make a different shape for each sub
125:11category okay kind of a nice chart to to
125:14look
125:14at very basic but you can start to get an
125:16idea of what you can do with this okay so
125:18just customize
125:19it as much as you want change it up go into
125:22the tooltips and add more detail the last
125:26thing i'll
125:26show you with this is you can still use
125:28dimensions up here in columns and rows so
125:31let's say i want to
125:32go and get the category and put it in front
125:35of cells you'll see i'll get three scatter
125:37plots
125:37and then let's say i want to get the ship
125:39mode and put it here in rows i'll get a
125:42grid of four
125:44by three each with a scatter plot inside of
125:47it okay so again as you're learning tableau
125:50try and
125:51mess around with different combinations see
125:53what they do and understand why they do
125:54those things
125:55okay super simple right that's the scatter
126:03plot so histograms now a histogram and a
126:08bar chart
126:09are kind of similar you know visually they
126:12're the same but they actually represent
126:14different things
126:15and the best way i thought of describing a
126:17histogram is it's like a bar chart but
126:20it takes something that typically doesn't
126:23you know sit in groups and creates a
126:26grouping out of it so
126:27the most common example you might think of
126:29a histogram is maybe you're creating ranges
126:32from
126:32let's say zero to ten ten to fifteen
126:35fifteen to twenty when you group those up
126:37they become
126:38discrete they become blue essentially and
126:41then you can use that separation to create
126:43a grouping
126:43and that grouping could then be visualized
126:45that's essentially what a histogram allows
126:47us to do
126:47now one of the techniques that you might
126:50use to do that is you might create
126:53something called a bin
126:55and a bin is like a bucket it's like a
126:56bucket of a grouping essentially you're
126:58putting things into
126:59a group and you are then going to use that
127:01group to visualize something so to give you
127:03an example
127:05i'm going to take the sales values here i'm
127:07going to right click on that and i'm going
127:10to go to
127:11create and i'm going to select bins and
127:12this is essentially going to create those
127:14groupings i was
127:15talking about and then i get this interface
127:17which basically asks me how big i'd like
127:19those bins to
127:20be and tableau looks at the data and comes
127:23up with a pretty good um you know estimate
127:26and the thing
127:27to bear in mind is this this is happening
127:29at the row level of detail so it's looking
127:32every row
127:32row of data looking at the sales and it's
127:34coming up with this size based on the
127:36general spread of
127:37the data and how it all looks you can set a
127:39minimum and the max and play around with
127:41all
127:41of these things but the suggested bin side
127:44is what that is there you can enter your
127:46own value
127:46so if you wanted that to be 500 you could
127:48but let's go ahead and just select 510 and
127:51now that
127:51we've created that bin you'll see that we
127:53get this new icon just over here on the
127:54left hand side with
127:55like a pyramid and these bars and this now
127:58is something that we can use as a bin okay
128:01so now that i've created the sales bins i
128:03've essentially taken something that was
128:05previously
128:06a continuous item you know if i bring the
128:09sales onto rows it creates an axis that's
128:12how i know
128:13that it's a continuous value and you can
128:15see that this measure is green as well but
128:18now when
128:18we make a bin from cells it creates a
128:21discrete item here and now you can see the
128:24separation is
128:25roughly 510 pounds in this case across each
128:29of these groupings what that allows me to
128:32do is i
128:32can then visualize it so i've rotated it 90
128:34degrees just so it goes across because that
128:36makes the most sense for a bar chart we
128:39want the bars to be vertical then i'll drag
128:41the actual
128:42cells and put it on rows so you might be
128:45thinking what is this chart showing me well
128:48i've taken each
128:48and every cell on every row and i've
128:51grouped them into bins and then i've
128:53actually asked tabular
128:54to aggregate all the cells that belong in
128:57those bins and so what this chart is
128:59showing me
129:00is that the majority of the cells in this
129:02data set are between zero to 510 pounds and
129:06that equates
129:07to 847 000 over the entirety of this data
129:10set and as you get to bigger and bigger
129:13transactions
129:14the cells become less and less so we do
129:17have some rather large cells and all the
129:20way out here on the
129:20right hand side but you kind of get the
129:22curve you'd expect you kind of get this
129:24sort of nice
129:25sort of tapered curve and this is sort of
129:26normal you'd expect this kind of
129:28distribution generally
129:29with data and there tends to be quite a you
129:32know a body of information or data at one
129:35particular
129:36point just just just just just the way the
129:38analytics works and statistics work and you
129:41can
129:41watch lots of videos on youtube that
129:43explain that better than i can so yeah
129:45there we have it it's a
129:46there we have it it's a very simple hist
129:48ogram there's not there's not much more to
129:50it but this
129:51although it looks like a bar chart this is
129:52technically a histogram now one of the
129:55things
129:55you could do is you could customize this a
129:57little bit so um you can see here that the
129:59sales bin the
130:00top is uh blue now if i go here and change
130:04it to continuous you'll see that the
130:07grouping along here
130:09changes essentially what happens is that
130:11blue bin and stops becoming a grouping and
130:13it becomes a
130:14range and the bars still sit within that
130:16range you can see this here at the bottom
130:19and it just
130:19basically goes from left to right and it
130:21works exactly as you'd expect so just
130:23because something
130:25is blue or discrete doesn't mean you can't
130:27change it just by changing these two
130:29options so this is
130:30almost a continuation from the previous
130:33point i made about discrete versus
130:34continuous okay so that
130:37is a handy trick to be aware of because
130:39what we've done in this chart is we've
130:41taken two values well
130:42one value and we've made two things out of
130:44it one is a bin one is the actual sales
130:47value we've made
130:48the bin continuous and then we visualize
130:49them against each other to create a
130:51grouping of the
130:52thing itself okay so that is a histogram in
130:55a nutshell um it's a very simple chart what
130:59i often
131:00find is that like bar charts are just much
131:02easier to build and just much easier for
131:04people to
131:04understand with a histogram you tend to
131:06find you have to just explain it a little
131:09bit more because
131:10these groupings aren't as apparent because
131:12you can't fit everything nicely in the axis
131:14where you
131:14tend to find histograms work really well is
131:17in surveys we have a scale maybe asking
131:19people about
131:20their age and you have a 0 to 10 10 to 15
131:2215 20 that makes really good um sort of
131:25histogram like
131:26data sets really that you can use to do
131:30that okay right let's go on to the bullet
131:33graph
131:35now the bullet graph is a is a bar chart
131:38let's let me just simplify that straight
131:40away so let's
131:41go ahead and take the subcategory and we'll
131:44take the we won't take the category we won
131:46't confuse
131:47things we'll just take the subcategory and
131:50we'll take the cells okay and uh i'll
131:52rotate this 90
131:53degrees by going to this icon just up here
131:55and we'll rotate it like that this is going
131:57to make
131:57it easier for you guys to see what's going
131:59on now one of the things we've done in the
132:01past is we've
132:01gone into the analytics pane and we've
132:03brought an average or some sort of
132:05reference line okay but in
132:08some cases you might actually want to use
132:11another value to use on the chart rather
132:14than bringing in
132:14a reference line you might actually want
132:16another bar to sit on top of the existing
132:18bar chart that
132:18you've got so a good example might be let's
132:21say you want to do some modeling okay and
132:24to do this
132:24i'm actually going to create a calculation
132:26which is jumping a bit ahead but you'll it
132:28's easy to
132:28follow along so you'll be able to do it and
132:31what i'll do is i'll go ahead and create a
132:33calculation
132:34so what i did there is i went to this
132:35little uh triangle icon and i selected
132:38create calculated
132:39field and i just brought this uh
132:41calculation window now these calculations
132:44work like you'd
132:44expect in excel and you can do aggregate
132:47calculations and row level calculations
132:49i'll explain those two shortly but for now
132:51just follow along with exactly what i'm
132:53doing okay
132:54so i'm just going to go ahead and aggregate
132:57all my cells by saying some of the cells
132:59and what i
133:01want to do is multiply that by uh 20 so i
133:03'll just put 0.2 i'm not going to bother
133:06right doing the
133:07percentage i just say just increase
133:09everything by 20 okay and we'll call this
133:13sales uh plus uh 20
133:14okay now technically speaking what i should
133:17do is do 1.2 because that's basically
133:20adding 20 to the
133:21whole percentage so that's actually what i
133:25should do hit apply and hit okay okay so
133:28now that we've
133:29done that and i have two sales values i've
133:32got uh sales and i've got sales plus 20 and
133:35i'll grab the
133:36sales plus 20 i'll put it right next to the
133:38other one so you can see it creates two
133:40charts for us
133:41what i'd like to do is have these two on
133:43top of each other essentially taking up the
133:45same space
133:46so you can see the differences between the
133:49two values so now that i've got them two
133:52side by
133:52side i can go to the second one go down to
133:55what's called dual axis and it will change
133:58the chart type
133:58now this drives people absolutely crazy
134:01because you had a bar chart and then it
134:02changed it to
134:03circle parts well what's going on well it
134:06turns out that because we have automatic
134:08here in the
134:09marks pane tableau is making a constant
134:11decision about the chart types we'd like to
134:13see so if i
134:14go back and this time instead of having it
134:17on automatic i keep it at bar when i go to
134:20do the
134:21dual axis you'll see tableau doesn't change
134:24it from a bar chart and so this has worked
134:27now the
134:28second thing is you can see that here on
134:30the legend you can see there's two
134:31different values
134:32cells and cells plus 20 but i can't see the
134:35sales values and that's because the orange
134:37ones have 20
134:38more cells and if they're on top of each
134:40other the blue cells are actually right
134:42behind these orange
134:43words so to bake this a bullet graph all
134:46you need to do is go to the uh the orange
134:49cells value which
134:50is sitting on top and just change the size
134:52of the bar and as we change the size of the
134:54bar you can
134:55see that those two values are actually
134:57right on top of each other so we're making
134:59one thinner than
135:00the other this reveals a new problem which
135:02is that the values are the same although i
135:05did tell tableau
135:06to add 20 to the cell so what's going on
135:09well the biggest clue is in the axis so if
135:11i look at the
135:12axis here 300 000 is there but for 300 000
135:15over here it's just down there it's not
135:18correct so what
135:18we do is we go to the second axis and
135:21select synchronize axis and that will get
135:24this working
135:25nicely so now the bullet graph is working
135:27and you can see all the cells are now 20
135:29now realistically
135:30this isn't what you do you wouldn't just
135:32add 20 to all the cells what you might do
135:34is you might have
135:35some targets you might have some goals and
135:37you might have those as another figure let
135:39's say you
135:40have cells and then you have budgeted cells
135:42this is how you'd use a bullet craft to
135:44show how one
135:45is comparing to the other and you can play
135:47around with which one you'd like to be the
135:49more prominent
135:49one or which one you'd like to be the
135:51better one once you have things set up you
135:53can kind of make
135:54things a lot better now if you do use a
135:56chart like this it's often handy to just
135:58make it really clear
136:00which axis refers to which so um the legend
136:02is often a good example and because both of
136:05these
136:05values are monetary i could just go ahead
136:07and hide one of the axis so then i don't
136:09have to worry about
136:10it and i can just say look this is the
136:12legend that tells you what is what but in
136:14in some cases you
136:15might actually want to keep the axis so one
136:17of the things you can do is you can right
136:18click format
136:20the axis and just change something like the
136:22color you could you could change the the
136:24color of the
136:25pacific um axis itself or you can go and
136:27change the color of the text just to make
136:30it more apparent
136:31what's going on okay so there's a whole
136:33bunch of options here you can kind of knock
136:35yourself out
136:35there's a whole range of things so um you
136:38know have a go at doing that i won't go
136:40into too much
136:41detail because i could spend easily 40
136:43minutes just some formatting in tablet um
136:46but it's all
136:46there you know how to do it just right
136:48click on the item select format and then
136:49you can play around
136:50with the selections as you want so that in
136:52a nutshell is essentially a histogram uh
136:55sorry that
136:55is essentially a bullet graph so we're
136:57basically building one on top of the other
136:59now the other
137:00thing that people do sometimes do is they
137:02then add some sort of reference line so you
137:04can still
137:04do that you can just go ahead and get some
137:06sort of reference line maybe you want to
137:08visualize the
137:09profit so what we can do is we can go and
137:11get the profit and put it on detail the
137:14reason i'm putting
137:15it on details because i want to use it and
137:17we've got it on sales plus 20 we'll go to
137:20the analytics
137:21pane and then we'll go and get um what we
137:24'll use we'll use a reference line and we
137:27can drop it on
137:28one of these pills you notice that now
137:30because we have two values it's telling me
137:31where i'd like to
137:32put it so i'd like to put it on each
137:34individual item so we'll go to the cell and
137:37i want to put
137:38it on sales plus 20 so that's sort of the
137:40combination of the two things and i'll drop
137:42it there
137:42and then it'll say okay what value would
137:44you like to use in the reference line and
137:46because we put our
137:47profit right there on the detail for sales
137:50plus 20 it's available to us in this drop
137:54down so we
137:55can go ahead select it and you can choose
137:57whatever value you want average maximum and
137:59minimum are all
138:00going to do the same thing because there's
138:02only sort of one value in this particular
138:05um actually
138:06no that's incorrect the profit is going to
138:08be aggregated so if i choose average profit
138:10it's
138:10going to show me the average profit what i
138:12really want is the total profit because
138:14that makes sense
138:14in this chart which actually adds
138:16everything up so go ahead and do that and
138:18you can see the
138:19okay button kind of weirded out a little
138:22bit we can go ahead and maybe set this
138:24dotted and let's
138:26just go ahead and say profit sum of profit
138:29and you can see let me make this red
138:32actually so it's super
138:34super obvious and it'll make it really
138:37thick and dotted not transparent actually
138:40we'll make it solid
138:41and you can see in the background it's kind
138:43of changing that a little bit so now the
138:45reference
138:46line is reflecting the changes i'm making
138:48okay so that's how you can keep adding a
138:51little bit more
138:52context what i really encourage you to do
138:54is spend a bit of time on color and a
138:55little bit on color
138:56theory just to make things really really
138:58obvious so maybe you might double click on
139:01sales and make
139:02sales gray because it's a less prominent
139:05item you might make sales plus 20 purple
139:07just to make it
139:08a little bit easier in the eye and there
139:10you go that's immediately much easier to
139:11see and then
139:12this this reference line we've added we can
139:14actually just click on it select edit and
139:17make
139:17that a nicer shade of something else maybe
139:20let's go for a paler red and there you go
139:22immediately
139:23a little bit more accessible much easier
139:25and if you have any people with
139:26accessibility needs
139:28then just bear their color needs in mind as
139:30well okay okay box and whisper whisker
139:33whisper
139:34or whisker it should be whisker gosh but
139:38and whisker plots now for this one and this
139:42is a
139:43it's an interesting chart because it's
139:45typically one that you'd use to show the
139:47the spread of data
139:49and normally when someone's asking for this
139:51they specifically want this so um let me
139:53just show you
139:54how it works for this one i'll drag sub
139:56category onto columns actually because we
139:59want the vertical
140:00separation between each of the subc
140:03ategories and then what i'm going to do next
140:05is going to be a
140:06little bit odd i'll put i'll put sales on
140:08rows okay and you'll see it builds a bar
140:10chart and
140:12because we're still on automatic tabular
140:13will keep changing the chart based on what
140:15i add to
140:15the visualization so if i put product name
140:18on detail what tabular understands is that
140:20i'd like
140:21to see each product uh broke this bar chart
140:24broken down by products now in real terms
140:26that's actually
140:27not what i want to see what i'd like to see
140:29is a dot that represents each product so
140:32let's go ahead
140:33to automatic and change that to a circle
140:35and you'll see a dot appear for where each
140:39product
140:39sits on that whole scale so this is a lot
140:41easier it also means we're not getting the
140:43aggregate
140:44effect of all these products sitting on top
140:46of each other in essence each dot is kind
140:48of its own
140:49individual thing on this visualization and
140:51it's a lot easier to sort of see
140:54now these dots are a little bit hard to
140:56sort of make out so what i could do is i
140:58could add the
140:59profits to the size so i can see which are
141:01the profitable dots and which ones aren't
141:03and you'll
141:04see that we actually have some negative
141:06values which can't really be smaller than
141:08you can't have
141:08like a negative size in tablets that's not
141:11going to work so maybe that's a bad
141:13decision instead
141:14maybe you want to put profit on the color
141:16so we can see whether they're profitable or
141:18not using
141:19a color range so instead of using profit i
141:21'm going to show you something new we'll
141:23click on the circle
141:24and we're going to select the color this
141:26allows us to change what this is doing
141:28without having
141:29to move it around and now you can see a
141:32much much better color okay so because of
141:35this it's
141:36much easier now to see which ones are
141:38profitable which ones aren't and we can
141:40actually change the
141:40size a little bit you can do a few things
141:42to sort of format this better you can go
141:45and change the
141:45border just to give it some more contrast
141:47maybe make these dark whatever you want to
141:49do and the
141:50world's your oyster change it as much as
141:51you want but we're trying to build a box
141:53and whisker plot
141:54not a not a sort of a pseudo you know
141:57scatter plot now to do that once we've got
142:00this set up
142:02once we've got the sort of spread and the
142:04detail covered we go to the analytics pane
142:07and you can
142:07see there's an option here for box plots
142:09okay this is essentially what a box and
142:11whisker is
142:12and as soon as i start dragging it onto
142:14cell you'll see that there's only one
142:16option and that
142:16is essentially to create a box and whisker
142:18for each sub category that i've got in the
142:20visualization
142:21as soon as i drop it on tablet thinks about
142:24it is it going to do something about it no
142:28no oh it did
142:29do something i didn't even say it i was so
142:31fixed on this top top data point i didn't
142:33see the box
142:34and whiskers down here so that was
142:36instantaneous and apologies on my part i
142:38should pay more
142:39attention to the lower end of the data but
142:41yeah there you go you can see the box and
142:43whisker parts
142:44turned up it's a little bit hard to see so
142:46how do you actually fix this to me this
142:49this is not ideal
142:50because it's not what you have in mind when
142:51you do a box and whisker plot and the
142:52problem is is that
142:53if you learn it to do if you learn how to
142:55do it this way you don't actually know
142:57where the settings
142:58are so let's go back a step just go into
143:00the back button up here and we remove the
143:02box block you see
143:04block spot is just a reference line it's a
143:07type of reference line see if you go to add
143:09reference line
143:11you get this interface again and you can go
143:13all the way across to box block and you can
143:16see you
143:16get the full settings here and you can
143:18change how the box block works so let me
143:20move it across
143:21you can see that it's just right there i
143:23can tell it to hide the underlying marks
143:26that takes away
143:26all the dots that sit underneath the box
143:28block but it doesn't take the ones that are
143:31outside of
143:31the extremes but i can also change the way
143:34that works so if i say maximum extent of
143:36the data then
143:37you see the box block takes up every single
143:39data point so it's depending on what you're
143:42going for
143:43you might want this or you might want this
143:46and i think box plots are defined by one of
143:49these two
143:50settings either the whole extent of the
143:52data or 1.5 times into quartile range
143:54whatever that is okay
143:56so choose whichever one you want you can
143:59choose a style there's glass classic
144:02classic wood dual
144:04fill all of this stuff is pretty good okay
144:07and then you can change the color you
144:09change the
144:10the extent you can pretty much customize it
144:12how you want change how the whiskers look
144:14if even if
144:14you want to do that and there you go you
144:17have your box blocks super simple um now
144:19the good thing about
144:20this is this doesn't stop you adding other
144:22bits of information on top of this so if
144:24you wanted to
144:25you could add another set of items maybe
144:27another reference line whatever you wanted
144:29to do those
144:30are still available to you so if i bring a
144:32sales item in again you see it draws two
144:34box plots and
144:35for this one i can go ahead and change how
144:38this works or change how it behaves okay so
144:41just because
144:41you've built one thing doesn't mean you can
144:43't customize it you can always pretty much
144:45dynamically
144:46change what you're seeing here in tableau
144:48very very easily okay so there we go that's
144:50our box plot
144:51box plot
144:57cool right tree map i like the tree maps
145:00tree maps are very good i like them um the
145:04simplest
145:05way to show you this is just to basically
145:07draw a simple one with just three items in
145:10it so i'll
145:10drag category onto color that gives us
145:13three dots three squares now that i've got
145:16that i'd like each
145:17square to be sized by the size of the cells
145:20that they have so if i just go ahead and
145:23put sales on
145:24size you'll see that we get a tree map that
145:26's literally as simple as it is okay now
145:29what we
145:29can do with the cells is we can put cells
145:32on the label and the label will give us the
145:35values okay
145:36and we can use this to maybe add some
145:37context maybe make it a little bit nicer
145:39and the other
145:40thing we can do is we can add the name of
145:42the category onto the label again that will
145:44add that
145:45to the tooltip and actually adds it to the
145:47label so if you want to customize it you
145:48can just click
145:49on the label go to these three dots and you
145:52can change the way these sort of set so it
145:55's funny
145:55it says category cells but if i hit apply
145:58it actually appears like that so it it was
146:01kind of
146:01doing some hierarchy stuff but it wasn't
146:04kind of showing what it wanted to now you
146:06might find it
146:07distracting that this label here is black
146:09and these two are white and what tableau
146:11has is this
146:12engine in the background which looks at the
146:14color and it tries to denote whether the
146:16contrast is
146:17accessibility friendly or not and if it's
146:20not it changes the color to something that
146:22is better okay
146:23so in this case it's saying that white is
146:25better on these two colors and black is
146:27better on these
146:28two colors if you want to kind of lock that
146:31in you can go to the label actually and
146:33just change the
146:34color yourself so if i go to text and i go
146:37to this formatting you can say just lock it
146:39into white hit
146:40apply uh why is that not working uh have i
146:43done the right thing uh i might not have
146:46done the right
146:47thing okay apologies um you have to do this
146:50on the font settings tableau is so
146:52inconsistent sometimes
146:54because you do have a formatting option
146:56there on the label but this formatting
146:57option only works on
146:59um some chart types because you can see
147:02here it doesn't apply it to this instead i
147:05have to go to
147:05the font select white and now it does apply
147:08okay there's a couple of other ones options
147:10here which
147:10is automatic which is what i've just
147:13explained a match mark color makes it
147:14roughly the same but
147:16still makes it easily easy to see sometimes
147:17that's a nice option just to keep things in
147:19theme
147:20now a nice thing with the stream app is you
147:22can actually add layers to it that's kind
147:25of confusing
147:26because you're thinking well how can i add
147:28more layers to this well if i bring a sub
147:30category into
147:30the detail you can see the coloring is
147:33still following the category but now it's
147:35broken these
147:36individual slots down into the subc
147:38ategories and so i might want to put sub
147:41category on the label
147:42as well just so it's clear that those
147:44sections exist and then what i might do is
147:48i might then
147:48go and add another breakdown let's go maybe
147:51with the shipping mode okay and if we do
147:55that again
147:56you'll see that it creates even bigger
147:58spacing between the groups and it kind of
148:00breaks it down
148:01so you can visually separate the different
148:04sections and you can add as many sort of
148:08breakdowns as you want into the visual
148:09izations as long as you understand the
148:11hierarchy of the data
148:12to break this down and kind of do different
148:14um chart types that are much more
148:16interesting okay
148:17so that is the tree map in a nutshell you
148:19can change this around obviously the tool
148:22tip
148:22everything it's completely interactive if
148:24you want it to be as well we'll show you
148:26how to do
148:26that later on so let's go ahead and call
148:30this tree map okay now the um next one let
148:34's go box
148:35and whisker and just cross that out strike
148:38and strike out the tree map and make sure
148:41that's out
148:42good so colored tables this is a this is an
148:45absolute brain to you sometimes in tableau
148:48because
148:49it's simple but it's not simple so let me
148:51just show you what i'm trying to do let's
148:54say we want
148:54to do a table that shows the cells going
148:56across each quarter over the last few years
148:59okay so to
148:59do that i'll drag order date onto columns
149:02you can see that it brings out the years
149:04now because tableau
149:05has an understanding of date it actually
149:07breaks down the dates for me into years
149:09quarters and
149:10dates i don't need to do the calculation to
149:12do that i don't need like a date model to
149:14come into
149:14my data set i can just bring it in and
149:17select the part that i want in this case i
149:19selected quarter
149:21if i didn't want quarter i could just go
149:23down to month and then remove whatever i
149:25wanted um but
149:25in this case i do want quarter so i'll just
149:27go year and quarter i actually want both of
149:30those
149:30not just quarter on its own okay the next
149:32thing i'll do is i'll bring subcategory
149:34onto rows just
149:35to give us a nice table and the reason it
149:37says abc is because we haven't got any
149:39information on
149:40the label so as soon as we add sales onto
149:43label then it fills it okay so this is a
149:45nasty table
149:46we don't like this it's really hard to see
149:48i can't really tell what's performing well
149:51and what's not
149:51okay now if i want this to fill the width
149:54of the screen i could actually go up here
149:56to standard and
149:57say fit width and tableau will kind of
150:00squash it to fit the width of my screen and
150:02now that i've
150:03got it like this what i'd like to do is add
150:05some color to this to help me see where
150:07things are
150:07going well and things are going badly so
150:10let me go ahead and drag the profit onto
150:12color and see what
150:13happens okay now when we do that a couple
150:15of things happen firstly everything goes to
150:18a hashtag
150:19the reason that is because we brought the
150:21legend in and that squashed the view to a
150:23size that no
150:24longer allows me to fit all the text so if
150:27i bring that legend over to this side then
150:29you can see that
150:30the spacing works again but that's not
150:32really a long-term solution i think because
150:34my screen is
150:35kind of squashed because i've got the
150:36agenda and everything it's just a spacing
150:38kind of conflict
150:39you could make the the text smaller as well
150:41if you wanted to do that to kind of get
150:43around that
150:44right click format and then change change
150:47the formatting formatting controls over
150:49there okay
150:50but this isn't what we want what we'd want
150:53is the text in one color and then in the
150:56background in
150:56different color and so what's what's going
150:59on here is that tableau is actually doing
151:01what i asked it
151:02to do you see i dragged the profit onto
151:04color and because it's saying automatic
151:07what tableau has
151:09decided is that the type of chart you want
151:12is a text chart and it's automatically
151:14going to then
151:15mean that the color is going to color the
151:19text what we actually want is do we want a
151:21square
151:22with the label as text not a table with
151:27text and then the color in the background
151:31being something
151:31else right so if i choose this to square
151:35now the color sits on the square and the
151:38sales value sits
151:39on the label and the label goes on top of
151:40the square and now we have a colored heat
151:42map so then
151:43what i can do is i can squash this again
151:46and now we can see where there's issues
151:49okay and tableau
151:50chooses this um sort of blue and red or
151:52orange color scheme because again it's
151:55accessibility
151:56friendly compared to red and red and red
151:59and green and this makes it much much
152:02easier to see in this
152:03data that the badly performing categories
152:05but also the courses in which things didn't
152:08go so well and
152:09it's obviously contextual to the whole
152:10visualization the scale is looking at the
152:13whole visualization so
152:14depending on what you choose this scale
152:16will naturally change if you want to change
152:18that
152:18you can go to edit colors and you've got a
152:20bit more control here you can say stepped
152:22colors which
152:23just you know locks down a limited set of
152:25colors that can sometimes make it easier to
152:28kind of make
152:28sense of what's actually doing badly and
152:31you can add more steps you could change the
152:34different sort
152:35of sizes as well it just depends if you go
152:37to advance you can actually lock in a start
152:39and an
152:39end and even where the center is so you
152:41could say the center is kind of off center
152:43just to make the
152:44coloring kind of work exactly how you want
152:47and then you've also got the wide list of
152:49options
152:50that you can choose here as well so i won't
152:52do much of that formatting i'll just go
152:54back to
152:54the default settings and we'll just hit
152:57apply and we won't do nine steps we'll just
153:01do a continuous
153:02scale like this which is a little bit more
153:04interesting to see and that's it that's our
153:06little
153:06heat map okay very easy to do right let's
153:12go to uh the maps are pretty exciting so
153:16let's go to
153:16here let's call this heat map and um okay
153:21so the the steps are just related to how
153:27many different
153:28gradients you want in the color that's it
153:30so um here at the moment you see there is
153:33no steps okay
153:34so the color range just goes from left to
153:37right in a continuous uh range as soon as i
153:40hit stepped
153:40color five steps just means i get five
153:43separations in the color and if i bump up
153:45the steps i get more
153:47individual steps in this particular color
153:50okay so if i hit five you'll see the tablet
153:53does its best
153:54job to kind of put things in specific steps
153:56but it tells you where the first uh well
153:58where the left
153:59hand side is starts and the right side ends
154:01but you might not have anything that takes
154:03up those
154:03specific spaces that's why i sometimes
154:05think it's better just to do a continuous
154:07scale because
154:07then everything kind of has a purposeful
154:10color and it allows me to even see for
154:12example that you know
154:13these uh where i'm looking here these two
154:15uh perform slightly differently but i know
154:17that this
154:18is also worse than that so it just makes it
154:20easy to kind of see where everything is so
154:23um that's that's basically what the steps
154:25do if that makes sense okay
154:26cool right um hi elaine um welcome good vib
154:34es indeed
154:37um right so what i was trying to do is
154:39build maps so maps are super easy in table
154:42au that um
154:43maps are probably one of the interesting
154:47the the mapping capability in tableau can
154:51in some cases
154:52make you know purpose-built mapping
154:55technology look really bad because of the
154:58way tableau is
154:59dynamic and it allows you to connect to
155:01data okay so you might say that look okay i
155:04've connected to
155:05this data set and i've got no you know no
155:07mapping information so how on earth is
155:09tableau going to
155:10draw a map well anytime you connect to a
155:12data set and tableau is able to recognize a
155:15certain set of
155:16values from the data set for example if i
155:19have a column called city or country region
155:23what tableau
155:24will do is it will look inside of that
155:26column and read all the values and if it
155:28can figure out that
155:30the values in there relate to a city and or
155:32country region that it's aware of in its
155:34data set then it
155:36actually assigns this globe icon to let you
155:38know that it thinks this field is actually
155:40playing a
155:41geographical role and that geographical
155:44role you can find out what it is by going
155:46to this little
155:47drop down selecting geographical role and
155:49it tells you right there that tableau
155:51thinks that this
155:52country and region field means country and
155:54region it's guessed that because that's
155:56what it's called
155:57but in some cases you could have called
155:58this region but it could still come in here
156:00and say
156:01country region okay and the city if you go
156:04look at that has a geographical role the
156:07city now other
156:08things that tableau is aware of if you have
156:10a list of airports area codes this is
156:11mostly us centric
156:13um but if you have a list of those and
156:14tableau is able to sort of recognize them
156:16just built in
156:17and in terms of global data sets um for
156:20example here in the uk it does understand
156:23postcodes so
156:24it's able to use uh that zip code or post
156:26code and i think tableau is aware of pretty
156:29much every city
156:30that has a population of over 100 000
156:33people um i think i can't remember if that
156:36's actually correct
156:37i need to sort of check my facts but i'm
156:39pretty sure that it has a pretty good
156:40database globally
156:41of towns and cities that mean a certain
156:44population of them okay and so to draw a
156:47map it's literally
156:48this simple you just double click the item
156:50and tableau will just go ahead and plot
156:53them for you
156:53and build a map okay that's it that's that
156:56's as simple as it is now it's maybe not the
156:59map you're
156:59expecting and so we'll get to the different
157:02types of maps but there i clicked city and
157:04so it just
157:04gave me all the cities that it found now
157:07there is a catch though because this doesn
157:10't look correct
157:11this is a large data set i've only got 49
157:14data points on here what's going on well
157:16with maps
157:17it's super important super important to pay
157:19attention to what's going on down here on
157:22the
157:22bottom right because what tableau is
157:25telling you here is it doesn't know where
157:27493 data points
157:29should go and so often i see maps where
157:31people haven't actually recognized this and
157:33they're
157:34wondering why they can't see the rest of
157:36their data so if we click on this 493
157:38unknown tableau
157:39gives you three options you can edit the
157:41location you can remove the data or we can
157:43show the data
157:44at default position which is going to be
157:46zero zero which is near the equator you don
157:47't want that
157:48so if you go and edit the locations tableau
157:51says hey look the country and region is a
157:54united
157:55kingdom the state and province i don't know
157:57what that should be so what you can do is
157:59you can tell
158:00tableau what these things should be so the
158:02country and region instead of being the
158:04united kingdom
158:05i can actually say go and get that from a
158:08field and this time the field that you're
158:11going to use
158:11is going to be this one country region and
158:14then the state and province i don't
158:16actually have one
158:17so we're just going to select none and the
158:20city that works out pretty well okay so if
158:22i go here
158:23you can see it's still not perfect so let
158:25me um let me reset the matches and just
158:28double check this
158:29we've got the country and region that's
158:31fine the state and province interesting uh
158:34oh no we do have
158:35a field for this we do have a field for
158:37this um i forgot that we have this state
158:39and province field
158:40right here if you didn't have that tableau
158:42would have to ask you like which country
158:44you're in
158:45and that's where you'd basically then go
158:47and lock that in and say we're going to be
158:49in this
158:49fixed country and so try and match the
158:51cities in this country but for this one i
158:53can actually just
158:54match it to the country and region state
158:56and province and now you can see that the
158:58errors
158:59that were here have completely gone
159:00everything is nice and good we're pretty
159:03much ready to go
159:04if i go look at the cities i can see the
159:05individual matches that it's manually done
159:09in the event you have a city that's new and
159:11it's not on here it will actually give you
159:13the option
159:14to edit the location and you can give it
159:16the latitude and longitude for that
159:18location you
159:19can just hit the drop down and you know
159:21enter the latitude and pretty much put it
159:22in yourself if it
159:23doesn't exist hit okay and notice that now
159:27we're actually visualizing this correctly
159:31so it first
159:32drew the map in the uk completely wrong the
159:34correct place is actually to do it here in
159:36the
159:36united states and so this is our map and
159:39this map is essentially showing us the
159:42point of each
159:42particular cells okay so we can see that
159:45that works nicely one of the things we
159:47might want to
159:48do is change the size of these dots to
159:50match the cells so i can go ahead and drag
159:53cells onto size
159:54that will match each dot with the size of
159:56the cells in that in that particular
159:59location you'll
160:00see some dots completely shrink to
160:01basically nothing but it kind of shows you
160:04whether the
160:04real business is happening and you can go
160:06ahead and actually drag the size up just so
160:08you don't
160:09lose some of that detail in the smaller in
160:12the smaller locations and what i find good
160:14to do in
160:15a map like this is i like to go to the
160:17color pane and i put a border of white
160:19because maps are sort
160:20of confusing and when you have overlaying
160:22points if they don't have a border it's
160:24hard to see what's
160:25going on so i like to put a white border on
160:27the map say everything is much easier to
160:29see and the
160:30final thing you can do is you can actually
160:32change the background map i think this is a
160:34pretty good
160:35one but you can change this background to
160:37be a different map by going up to map and
160:39you can see
160:40you've got different options here so you've
160:42got background maps light normal dark
160:44streets outdoors
160:45satellite offline whatever so let's go to
160:47light this is the one we're on let's go to
160:50normal this
160:51is what actually typically tableau will use
160:53especially when you don't have an internet
160:55connection this is actually what it will
160:59default to uh dark is sort of like a dark
161:01version of the
161:02map and you notice how the the data points
161:05look a bit different here uh streets i'm
161:08only showing you
161:09this because i think it's good to know that
161:10it exists i'm just kind of giving you the
161:12full
161:12contrast now um the nice thing about some
161:15of these especially the map box one which
161:18is what
161:18this street map is is that it's vector uh
161:21maps so we might be looking at a whole
161:23country level here
161:25but let's say i was to zoom in let's can i
161:27can i zoom in yeah we can uh which way am i
161:30zooming in
161:30and this way is zoom in i'm trying to
161:33figure out which way is zoom on my mouse um
161:35just so we can
161:36see and as we zoom in can you notice the um
161:39the level of detail increases on the map so
161:42the detail
161:43that you get on the map is relevant to your
161:45zoom level and for some of these if i just
161:47go into
161:48washington there's one cell here in washing
161:50ton um it takes a little time for the map
161:53information to
161:54load but the mapping detail is pretty
161:56detailed i'd be surprised that if you went
161:59to your home region
162:00you wouldn't have for example all the
162:02individual walkways going through a park it
162:04's it's it's
162:04incredibly detailed and if i even go right
162:07down you can even see little monuments and
162:09everything
162:10that you'd expect so table mapping is
162:12incredibly powerful uh the next one i'll go
162:15to just to sort
162:16of show this off one last time is satellite
162:19and the satellite imagery again from map
162:21box is pretty
162:22good here you can even see individual
162:24trucks and you can see the washington
162:26monument right there
162:27so uh super super cool and what i'll do
162:30though is i'll go back to just the boring
162:33old normal map
162:34and this will allow us to go back to the
162:37normal zoom level now what i want to do is
162:40i want to zoom
162:41back out to see everything so if i hover my
162:44mouse here you can uh it disappears so let
162:48's not do that
162:49so if i just move my mouse here you can see
162:51where my mouse is right now um if i untick
162:53that it
162:54resets the map to have everything in the
162:57visualization and this little toolbar is
162:59called
162:59the mapping toolbar essentially you can
163:01customize how it works and everything um
163:03you can even choose
163:04what to share and what to hide i won't do
163:06that here but you've got a few controls one
163:08of them
163:09is the ability to zoom so if i wanted to
163:10zoom in so let's say this group of cells i
163:13could just do
163:13that by highlighting them like that then i
163:16get the zoom zooming into that level i'll
163:18go back to
163:19the left hand side uncheck that pin it goes
163:21back to the full zoom level okay so that's
163:24one type of
163:25map we'll call this a dot map let's say um
163:28now maybe i want to do a different kind of
163:32map maybe
163:33i want to do a field map where each state
163:35is filled okay so let's go ahead and double
163:37click
163:38state and province and you'll see that it
163:40struggles again and the reason is because
163:42we
163:42haven't actually given this specific field
163:45a geographical role we told it what that
163:48field
163:48was here but then we weren't giving it a
163:50geographical role we were telling it what
163:52it is
163:52okay so let's just go to this little drop
163:55down and let's go to geographical role and
163:57it is actually
163:58selecting state and province but the issue
164:00is it doesn't know which um probably doesn
164:03't know
164:03which country it is it keeps thinking i'm
164:06in the uk it's just not correct so we'll
164:08just tell it to
164:09use the country and region select okay um
164:11this might happen to you as well and there
164:13you go you'll
164:14see each and every um area filled what is
164:16really interesting about this is that i
164:18didn't know that
164:20this superstore data set now includes can
164:22ada that's uh really strange but okay um it
164:26's never
164:27included canada before i've just noticed
164:29that now that we have all the sort of can
164:30adian states up
164:31here but anyway we've got a dot map again
164:33we don't want the dot map we want a filled
164:35map so each of
164:36these states should be a filled border okay
164:39well you see again the automatic is playing
164:42its role
164:43here it's changing the chart type depending
164:45on what it thinks works best but if instead
164:48of a dot
164:48or circle i end up going down here to a map
164:52you get a filled map and now each state is
164:55filled
164:55okay obviously it's good to have labels on
164:58these so i can drag state and put it back
165:01on the label
165:02and now each of these will be labeled
165:04really nicely and i can do things like
165:06color it so i can color
165:08i can color this by profit actually so you
165:10can drag the profit put it on color and
165:12again we get
165:13our little coloring to tell us show us how
165:16profitable everything is okay super simple
165:19nice
165:20and easy sort of no complex uh situations
165:22yeah now um at the very beginning of the
165:25stream yesterday i
165:26showed you um a colleague of mine who
165:29managed to put both the dot map and the
165:32filled map on top of
165:34each other okay so how do we do that well
165:36for your benefit let me just create this
165:39again so i'll
165:40double click state and province it'll
165:41complain saying it doesn't know what the
165:43locations are
165:44i'm going down here to the bottom right
165:46hand side edit locations i'm telling it
165:49that the country and
165:49region definitions should come from a
165:52specific field called country and region
165:56okay and i can't
165:57really show you this but this country and
165:58region field is this field if you don't
166:00have a country
166:00and region field what you could do is you
166:03can specifically tell it which country to
166:05use or just
166:06completely tell it to ignore the country
166:07and it will do its best to match everything
166:09but for now
166:09we can actually use the country and region
166:12you've got a couple of other um bits of
166:14information and
166:14standards but it's not really relevant for
166:16this particular crash course go ahead and
166:18click ok i
166:19everything's working fine go ahead set up a
166:22filled map then we got our first map ready
166:25to go okay
166:26now our second map it's a little bit more
166:28complex because what we need to do is
166:30essentially add the
166:31same map in again and that's a little bit
166:34trickier to do because if i just go and
166:36double click let's
166:37say city well it changes the map so how do
166:39we do that how do we get the maps on top of
166:42each other
166:44well for that what you want to do is drag
166:47latitude next to latitude again and long
166:50itude next to
166:51longitude again what that does is it gives
166:54us four maps even more confusing and then
166:57once we've done
166:58that we can go and use the technique we've
167:00been using already called dual axis so go
167:02ahead and
167:02select dual axis and select dual axis for
167:05both of those what that does is it puts
167:07both maps on top
167:08of each other but as you've known whenever
167:10you've got two things on top of each other
167:12each of them gets their own formatting pane
167:15on the left hand side so what i can do with
167:18this top one
167:19is i can go to this one and tell it to be a
167:21circle and i can go to the bottom one and
167:24that can be a
167:24filled map okay and i think the way i've
167:26done this i've got them the wrong way
167:28around so what i'll do
167:29is i'll actually swap that around i'll say
167:32look the bottom one can be a circle the top
167:34one can be
167:34a filled map and i think that works a
167:37little bit better because yeah i can see
167:38that this circle is
167:39now on top okay now what we'll do with the
167:43map this one over here is i'll go ahead and
167:46color
167:46that by profit okay and now you can see the
167:49dots a bit more clearly and then for the
167:51dots i'll click
167:52on that i'll set the dots to white and now
167:55that dot becomes almost like a nice styl
167:59istic element
168:00that we can use to convey other bits of
168:02information uh priya in her visualization
168:05used it to convey
168:06the cells so the size of the circle
168:09reference the cells and so if i just bump
168:11that up and let's just
168:12bump it down actually let's just bump it
168:14down you kind of have to play with this
168:15until you're kind
168:16of happy then you kind of get a good feel
168:19for what's going on let me just set a nice
168:23dark border
168:23on these so they're easy to see and then
168:26for my scale up here i i don't like the
168:29sort of red to
168:30blue scale so what i'll do is i'll go
168:32double click on the legend to give us this
168:35color view and then
168:37i'll go ahead and select the blue and hit
168:39apply so the darker the blue the more
168:41profitable and that's
168:43not even close to what priya did but it's a
168:45similar kind of chart now you can see kind
168:47of
168:47what you can do with this and you can apply
168:50style it and do whatever you want to it and
168:52again don't
168:52forget you can add labels so in this
168:55particular case i can go ahead and add the
168:57labels to this
168:59and it works you know it's a bit messy but
169:01depending on what you're showing it might
169:03kind
169:03of work out now the other thing not to
169:06forget is that this circle doesn't have to
169:09be at the same
169:09level of detail as your states so here we
169:12've got states but the circles could
169:15actually represent
169:16cities instead i just drag city put it on
169:20detail and now you'll get more dots one for
169:22each city
169:23and that allows you to sort of overlay the
169:25two on top of each other so depending on
169:27the story
169:28you're trying to tell you need to make some
169:30design choices some stylistic choices and
169:32some formatting
169:32choices but if you make the right ones you
169:34can bring a combination of these two to
169:36build yourself
169:37a really powerful map okay and so that is a
169:40pretty i think detailed enough introduction
169:44to maps just
169:45to get you going and get you started and
169:47sort of understand how it works all right
169:50so we've done a
169:51field map uh we've done a dot map oh
169:58spatial data you know this is a bit
170:01advanced but i will show it
170:03anyway um spatial data when you connect to
170:06a data type if i just click on this little
170:09tableau logo
170:10yeah when you click on that it goes back to
170:12the connection window we had at the very
170:14beginning
170:14and you can see that one of the types of
170:16files you can connect to is spatial okay
170:18and spatial
170:19files if i click on that are typically
170:21known as these file types you can see here
170:24so if you know
170:25that you're getting spatial data from a
170:27system then you can go ahead and use this
170:30type if you
170:31don't have access to any spatial data i
170:33recommend you go to any government website
170:35that has open
170:36data sources for example in london you can
170:38go to there's a date there's a london data
170:41store that
170:41has data from councils in america i know
170:44new york have a new york open data
170:46initiative where you can
170:47go and download spatial data that tells you
170:50for example the location of trees that's
170:52actually data
170:53i use in the most recent video explaining a
170:55new feature in tableau so go ahead and
170:56check that out
170:57but once you download that data you'll
170:59notice that it comes in one of these
171:01particular file formats
171:02either a zip file a shape file and once you
171:04've got those file types you can go ahead
171:06and connect to
171:07them i'll show you a very brief example
171:09just to show you what that file looks like
171:11so for example
171:12here i have a folder that has the waterways
171:15in london and the shape file it ends in a
171:18dot shp
171:19and you can see that's this far here that's
171:22leveled okay so the the thing about spatial
171:25files
171:25is that this file isn't actually the only
171:28file that's required all of these files are
171:31important
171:31because they tell the file different things
171:34about where the individual bits of
171:36information are so
171:37whenever you see a shape file don't delete
171:40the other files that come with it keep it
171:42together
171:42or zip it up and tableau can open both of
171:44those okay so let's go ahead and open the l
171:47ondon waterways
171:48and as soon as we open that up you'll see
171:50that it loads up the connection window we
171:53've seen already
171:54i'll go to a brand new sheet let's go to
171:56sheet number 16 and you can see this is my
171:59data okay
172:00we're wfd london that's the waterways so
172:02you're probably wondering well what makes
172:05this spatial
172:05data what makes this different you just got
172:08a bunch of fields you've got a country
172:10field that's
172:10nothing special well spatial data tends to
172:13contain what is called a geometry and a
172:16geometry is
172:17something like this you'll see that it says
172:20geometry and it has a globe icon and the
172:22thing
172:22about geometries is they contain either
172:25polygons lines or points so points are just
172:28latitude and
172:29longitude a line is maybe the the road a
172:31road network could be lines a river network
172:34could be
172:34lines and polygons tends to be the shape of
172:36boundaries for example the state boundaries
172:39are polygons and city boundaries are polyg
172:42ons okay and so when you double click those
172:44geometry
172:45tableau actually draws whatever's behind
172:47that geometry so in this particular setup
172:50these are the different waterways that lead
172:52up to the river tems in london so if i
172:54actually go back
172:55to my map and i just bring on the streets
172:57view you can see that this is indeed london
173:00and when
173:01i hover over one of the geometries it
173:03highlights everything but the reason that
173:05is because i haven't
173:06told tableau that i need to add more detail
173:09so what i need to do is go and get the name
173:12of the
173:13waterways and now when i hover over one of
173:15them you see that it only selects that
173:17particular one
173:19and the reason you might want to visualize
173:20these is maybe you're telling a story about
173:22the waterways
173:23in london and the quality and so you need
173:25to go get the shape file that has the
173:27waterways then
173:28you need to go get the data that links to
173:30those waterways you can bring them together
173:33inside a
173:34tableau that's a bit advanced we're not
173:35going to do that in this crash course but
173:37you bring them
173:37together using a union or a join or
173:39something fairly straightforward and then
173:41you can visualize
173:43that information quite nicely here in table
173:45au so that's why you'd use a shape file and
173:46that's why
173:47you'd kind of be doing this here inside the
173:49tableau so um i've just sort of shown you
173:51that
173:51so you know what to go and google what to
173:53search for and if you look at sort of demos
173:55that i've
173:56done on new features you'll see the
173:57techniques you need to kind of do all of
173:59this so just look
174:00through the channel look through other
174:02videos and if i can suggest one person if
174:05you do nothing else
174:06and go and look for a chap called mark reed
174:10and his youtube channel he's a friend of
174:14mine and he
174:14also has a great youtube channel he has
174:16done some absence absolutely fantastic
174:19videos in general
174:19about tableau but he's also very good at
174:22explaining spatial features in tableau so
174:24you can look at
174:24some of the formulas and calculations and
174:26how he's setting these up and he's got a
174:28really good
174:29storytelling method as well as how to how
174:31to sort of bring these two together so go
174:33check out his
174:33videos and follow his channel it's a really
174:35really good resource for this particular
174:36kind of analysis
174:37okay um but for now we'll just leave that
174:40at that we'll leave the mapping there what
174:42i'll do is i'll
174:43put this file that i've downloaded here in
174:45the description along with this video so
174:47you can
174:47download it and try it as well okay good
174:54right um excellent let's keep pushing so we
174:57've got spatial
174:58data and i think i've shown you how to
175:00style maps a little bit we kind of played
175:03around with the
175:04coloring on this tab we did a bunch of
175:06different things and it was all good so
175:09again for a crash
175:10course i think this is all you really need
175:12i mean if you turn up and after you know
175:14watching this
175:16course you can do this kind of stuff you'll
175:17be blowing people's minds if it's just the
175:19first
175:19time you've used tableau so we'll keep this
175:22simple for now and we'll move on okay um uh
175:28duh duh duh duh duh the oh this is where i
175:31get to tell you why i don't like a specific
175:34feature yeah
175:35and this is called a show me okay um uh and
175:37re i've seen your question i'll get back to
175:40that just
175:40in this in a second okay so um something
175:43really common when people use tableau is uh
175:48this thing
175:48up here let me just show you this this
175:51thing called show me okay i hate this with
175:53a passion
175:54i hate when i see people using this and if
175:56you use it right now that's totally fine i
175:59'm not here
176:00to sort of say you shouldn't use it or
176:02whatever but the reason i hate it is
176:04because i don't think
176:05tableau built it well enough to really help
176:07people understand what it's actually trying
176:10to get you to
176:10do okay the purpose of the show me tool is
176:13to help you understand how to build a
176:16specific chart so if
176:17i go ahead and click on it i don't know if
176:19you know this you can actually drag it and
176:21move it
176:21wherever you want not many people know that
176:23either so you can click on it but not many
176:25people think
176:25to just drag it and put it wherever they
176:27want so let's say we drag it and put it
176:28here on the left
176:29when i hover over these different charts
176:32can you see that it tells you what you need
176:35on the bottom to get it to work okay and
176:38you know this is this is literally telling
176:42you
176:42how to build a chart and i have no issue
176:46with you using this if you could create the
176:49chart yourself
176:50without using this because then you're
176:53using as a shortcut let's call it like a
176:55keyboard shortcut
176:56to get to a chart type really quickly but
176:58in my in my experience as a trainer i've
177:01trained
177:01thousands of people i've taught many people
177:04here on youtube i've even seen other people
177:07training
177:07tableau on youtube in other tutorials
177:09showing people how to use this and then
177:12telling people
177:13the wrong thing because they're using show
177:15me as a starting point and then they don't
177:18know how
177:18they've got themselves into that position
177:20and they end up just basically clicking
177:22around until they
177:23get everything how they want it but they've
177:25done it in a really cumbersome way a way
177:27that would
177:28have taken less time if they just knew how
177:30to build charts that is why up until now i
177:32have not
177:33used show me to show you how to build any
177:35of these charts all of these charts we've
177:37done them and i've
177:39tried to explain the mechanics of how the
177:41charts works because if you understand the
177:43mechanics you
177:44can customize them and just notice that
177:47many of them don't have more than five
177:49things here in the
177:50in the view okay very few things however if
177:53you use show me more often than not it uses
177:56more than
177:57is required so let's let's just have a go
177:58using it so you can kind of see that play
178:00out so here
178:01let's say we want to build a pie chart we
178:03need one dimension and two one or two
178:06measures so what you
178:07can do with this you can select a dimension
178:09so let's say we're going to select category
178:11and
178:11notice when i select it it sort of lights
178:13up on the right hand side to show you what
178:15you can use
178:16and i'm going to hold um command and select
178:19cells and you see as soon as i select cells
178:22and category
178:23all the charts that i can build with those
178:25two things turn up okay so if i select tree
178:27map you'll
178:28see that it builds a tree map that i showed
178:30you how to build this is a tree map that it
178:32built
178:32now it did that in two i'll say three
178:35clicks i held city cells and then i came
178:39here and i
178:39selected tree map and then it built it okay
178:42go look at my tree map okay mine's a bit
178:44more complex
178:44because we added stuff to it but ultimately
178:47it's exactly the same chart so all the same
178:50mechanics
178:50are just being built and so what what what
178:53i wish show me did is instead of just
178:55putting everything
178:56on the visualization because notice notice
178:58what it did in one sweep there's nothing on
179:00the
179:00visualization city cells is absolutely
179:03nothing you click tree map and boom it just
179:05turns up and and
179:07now it actually built something different
179:09which is also really frustrating like
179:11sometimes oh because
179:12i selected city not category fine but it's
179:15just so so jarring experience because it
179:18doesn't actually
179:19show you what it's doing so if you're going
179:21to use show me pay attention to how it's
179:23building that
179:24chart for you let's take one more example
179:27let's clear the sheets let's take a
179:30category product
179:32let's take sorry products and sales okay
179:35and it says we can draw a box block so let
179:38's go ahead
179:38and do that and boom it creates one of
179:40these now people get frustrated because
179:43they wanted a box
179:44for but they didn't know they needed to add
179:45subcategory to have it split out and sort
179:47of
179:47create something nice so another problem
179:49with show me is it doesn't guide you
179:51through the question
179:52you're trying to answer because what you
179:54really needed to do is you needed to select
179:56product sales
179:58and then subcategory then come here to the
180:01box plot and it would have built something
180:04that we
180:05built before okay and we built it maybe
180:07that one was a little bit sort of faster
180:10than us doing it
180:11but you see now that you've got this if i
180:13asked you how do you customize this if you
180:16've any ever
180:16used show me to get here you wouldn't know
180:19basically you wouldn't know that if i right
180:21click
180:21on the axis edit the reference line then go
180:23to the box what i have all of these
180:24settings available
180:26and that's my sort of gripe with show me so
180:28if you're using show me and this is how you
180:30work
180:30totally fine i've no issue with it
180:32whatsoever but just remember that it's
180:34trying to show you how to
180:35use the chart so pay attention to what it's
180:38doing when i go and create a chart let's
180:40say i bring
180:42sales and let's say this time category and
180:44i create a bubble chart what has it done it
180:47's created
180:47three circles but how has it done it well
180:50instead of a square which gives us a tree
180:52map it's changed
180:54it to a circle which gives us a bubble map
180:56that is it that's as simple as that so now
180:58you know that
180:59if i go back to my tree map what happens if
181:01i change this to a circle well i get a
181:03bubble map
181:04dead simple so now you know that mechanic
181:06if you're building this chart and you don't
181:09like
181:09what you're looking at and someone says oh
181:10can you just make that a bubble chart
181:12instead of going
181:12back and selecting all the things to get it
181:14back to where you did like maybe six or
181:16seven steps
181:17you just go in here like a boss hit circle
181:19and you're done okay so that's my little
181:22sort of
181:23rant against show me done i'll never talk
181:25about it again that's it for this crash
181:27course okay
181:28so um diablo they do tell you it's the
181:31easiest way to use it
181:35it's uh it's it's it's drives me nuts but
181:38yeah anyway right so listen we've built a
181:42bunch of
181:42stuff here and you're probably wondering
181:44well how do i see all this wonderful stuff
181:46that i've built
181:46is there a way i can see each and every one
181:49of these views easily and uh then allow
181:53sort of you
181:54to kind of have an overview of all the
181:55charts you've built there is actually a way
181:57not many
181:57people know about this either just down
181:59here it's just tiniest thing i'm gonna i'm
182:01gonna in the edit
182:02i'll have to zoom into this section and
182:04just show it to you you've got three icons
182:06the one we're in
182:07at the moment is the one on the right hand
182:10side if i select the second to last one you
182:12notice that it
182:13shows me the visualizations along the
182:15bottom but still keeps them as tabs so i
182:17can go through the
182:18tabs as i was doing before this is kind of
182:19handy if you want to see the charts that
182:21you're using
182:22make it sort of really nice to browse the
182:25one i like is actually this grid one here
182:28at the bottom
182:28so this very final one if i click on that
182:30it gives me this and this allows me to see
182:32all the things
182:33i've built and it's nice because i get an
182:35overview if i want to quickly go and see
182:37where is that chart
182:38that i built oh i built five variants of it
182:40it's just all here and it's really nice and
182:42here's a
182:42little trick not many people know this
182:44either when you open a workbook for the
182:46first time let's say
182:47you become tablo sort of professional
182:49whatever you've done your certifications
182:51you're using
182:52tabla every single day when you open your
182:54workbook for the first time what tablo hasn
182:57't done is
182:58hasn't loaded all the visualization so you
183:00'll go to each tab but it will still be
183:01loading the
183:02visualization and here's the trick if you
183:05come to this tab right click then select
183:08refresh thumbnails
183:09that has the effect of loading every single
183:13tab in one go okay and that is often faster
183:16than going to
183:17each of them separately and getting it to
183:19load so if you're trying to get everything
183:20to load quickly
183:21this is the way to do it and this is why i
183:23'm showing it to you okay to go back to an
183:26individual
183:26chart you just go back down here and select
183:29one of the views you want and there you go
183:32pretty much
183:32good to go okay so we've done some charts
183:36everything's looking good and we're
183:39basically
183:40kind of now getting familiar with the
183:41mechanics of how to build charts in tablo
183:43now we need to
183:45start sort of building a story and to do
183:47that in tablo there's a couple of ways and
183:49essentially
183:49it's called a dashboard and dashboards
183:52bring together some of these charts into
183:54one sort of
183:55story okay so how do we create a new
184:00dashboard well if i go to um well let me
184:04let me let me start
184:05again because i have this um view here
184:08where i can see an image for each tab the
184:12settings for
184:13creating a dashboard are squashed to this
184:15very right hand side so you have the option
184:17for a new
184:17sheet a new dashboard and a new story we're
184:20not going to cover stories in this crash
184:22course it's
184:22kind of rarely used but again there's lots
184:24of videos out there for it i'm just going
184:26to use
184:26dashboard and sheets if i go back to the
184:29view i had before then that option is here
184:32and here and
184:33the less you have in a workbook the more
184:35these settings kind of move around so
184:37before we had
184:37lots of things in our dashboard or in our
184:39view it actually these options were all the
184:42way to the left
184:42hand side okay but let's go ahead and
184:44select the second one to create a new
184:46dashboard and you'll
184:47see that it gives us a canvas okay now this
184:50canvas is just a blank canvas we can go
184:51ahead and do a
184:52couple of things with it but if i hover
184:54over these charts you can see all the
184:56charts we've created
184:57are just here on the left hand side so what
185:00you can evidently do is you can bring these
185:02into this
185:03canvas and you're pretty much ready to go
185:06you can build a dashboard now dashboarding
185:09in tableau
185:10is probably the most time-consuming part of
185:12tableau and i'm not proud of this i'm not
185:14proud
185:14of tableau that this is this is my time
185:16consuming part because i've had plenty of
185:18opportunities to
185:19sort of address this and make it easy for
185:21people so this is probably where people get
185:24the most
185:24frustrated with tableau because things you
185:27'd think that are straightforward just
185:29appear not to be
185:30straightforward so to simplify it i
185:31recommend you do a couple of things when
185:33you're building your
185:34first dashboard keep the dashboard simple
185:37don't try and bring too many things in at
185:39once so for
185:40this one i'm just going to double click the
185:42tree map you'll see it comes in i will
185:45bring the dot map
185:47i double click that and you'll see it when
185:49i double click them it brings them in
185:51absolutely fine and
185:52then the last thing i'll do is probably
185:54bring in the line chart okay so i brought
185:57three things in
185:58now when i double click them it brings
186:00everything in so you can see the formatting
186:03on this is a bit
186:03janky it's not nice we've got the legend
186:05over here it's a little bit of broken
186:07dashboard isn't it it's
186:08not some sort of nice aesthetic and we want
186:11to kind of change this and what we should
186:14do is we
186:15should while i start to do is i just clear
186:17the dashboards completely with legends i
186:19can bring
186:20the legends back very easily i'll show you
186:22how so i just go ahead and select them one
186:24by one and i
186:24clean them out okay that gives the
186:26dashboard a bit more space the next thing i
186:28decide is how big the
186:29dashboard should be so if you're building
186:32this in an organization the dashboard size
186:35in my opinion
186:37should be one of two things it should
186:39always represent the smallest size that
186:41someone's really
186:41going to realistically use so typically
186:44laptops and the second thing it should
186:47never be automatic
186:48or user range and this is an advanced topic
186:51but long story short if it's automatic or
186:53users
186:54arrange the performance will be worse just
186:57a fact i can tell you why in another video
186:59but automatic
187:01and or range dashboards do create worse
187:03performance because tableau can't pre-
187:05render the
187:06visualization to suit every single screen
187:08size okay just can't do that it can't know
187:10what screen
187:11size someone's laptop's going to be so
187:14these two will impact performance so i
187:17always use a fixed
187:18size people will have aesthetic reasons for
187:20changing it you might get clients who'll
187:23say hey
187:24i'd like it to fill my screen well yes in
187:26an ideal world but no this is tableau so
187:29let's just keep it
187:29simple the next thing i'll do is the width
187:32i normally go to about 1 200 that to me is
187:35like
187:36the optimal size people have decent laptops
187:38now they have decent screens at work you
187:39know 1 200
187:40works pretty well you can see it fits on my
187:42screen with plenty of space all the way
187:44around and 800
187:45vertical as well it's kind of good i could
187:47go to 900 but 800 is just like a nice
187:49proportion
187:50so now that i've got the spacing correct i
187:52can now start to move things around and to
187:55do this
187:55the simplest thing to do is just to grab
187:57the chart and move it to where you want and
188:00you see tableau
188:00will kind of highlight things for you so if
188:02i move it up to the top it says it's going
188:03to take the
188:04whole entire width and it goes ahead and
188:06does that and the tree map here i want to
188:09put it to the right
188:10hand side of the line chart so i'll just
188:11grab it and put it down here and there you
188:13go okay and
188:15that is again for your first dashboard that
188:17's as simple as it needs to be now when you
188:21want to go
188:22ahead and do more advanced techniques and
188:24tricks you're going to have to start
188:25getting familiar
188:26with something called layout containers and
188:28layout containers are essentially boxes
188:30where you can put
188:31charts in and then move things around in
188:34containers i've done a whole video on this
188:37if you just google
188:38layout containers on tableau i've done a
188:42video on this multiple people have done
188:46videos on this
188:46actually so i've done a 10 minute video 73
188:49000 views that shows you how big of an
188:50issue this is
188:52and it explains layout containers in a
188:54nutshell very simple very it's very sort of
188:56easy to do
188:57okay so go ahead and check that video out i
188:58'm not going to cover it here because it's
189:01just something
189:01that i think isn't necessary for a crash
189:03course you don't need to be a layout
189:05container master
189:06for your first dashboard now the last thing
189:09i'd want to do you can see the line chart
189:11the
189:11tree map all of these are great the last
189:13thing i want to do is maybe bring in a
189:15title so over
189:16here on the left hand side you can see i
189:18can bring in a bunch of other things uh
189:20text is going to
189:21allow me to bring the title so i'll just
189:23bring it to the top we'll call this this is
189:25my title okay
189:26and again you're just trying to get
189:28something that looks good for your first
189:30dashboard and you're not
189:32trying to uh you know come out with the
189:35stops and have like a kick-ass design just
189:37keep it simple
189:38for your first dashboard and you might
189:40decide to maybe make this larger there you
189:42go and there you
189:43get done now there is actually another way
189:45of bringing the title i completely forgot
189:47about it so
189:47i i'm like go on then i'll show you this um
189:50down here you can see this is this this
189:53dashboard is
189:54called dashboard one okay and if i'm if i'm
189:57correct if i go back to dashboard up here
190:01i can see there's an option here to show
190:03the title and that show title will get the
190:06title from
190:06the name that you've given down here okay
190:10so if i go ahead and rename this and call
190:13this
190:13my first dashboard
190:16okay then you see that the title is there
190:19and then you no longer need this text box
190:23the nice thing about this title is it's
190:25known as a dashboard title therefore it
190:27gets formatting like
190:28a dashboard title and if you go to the
190:31format and you go to dashboard all these
190:34options observe the
190:35different things that you set up so the
190:37dashboard title for example we can go in
190:39here set it to red
190:40and you can change it however you want the
190:42worksheet titles which are these ones
190:44you can change those all in unison make
190:46them really nice and um essentially just
190:49start to
190:49style this out a little bit nicer okay so
190:51there you go there's your first dashboard
190:53super simple
190:54no interactivity it's just a dashboard you
190:56put the picture everything is on there the
190:59last things we
190:59can do is make sure everything fills the
191:01space so this tree map doesn't quite go all
191:04the way to the
191:04end so let's go ahead and go to that select
191:07fit the width and it will see or just fit
191:09the space
191:09this one we set it to entire view already
191:13and so has the map perfect that's all we
191:15really need we
191:16don't need much more than that and for me i
191:18'd say this is this is for your first
191:20dashboard this is
191:21perfect my first dashboard was a hundred
191:23times worse than this i was trying to find
191:25the image
191:26for this and i couldn't find the image i do
191:28have the image somewhere but i just couldn
191:30't find where
191:30i've stored it so if i find the image i
191:32will i'll probably do a video on my first
191:35dashboard you can
191:36see how bad my first dashboard was it was
191:3910 times worse than this okay so if you if
191:42you kind of
191:42achieve anything better than this you're
191:44already starting off with a much better
191:45path than even i
191:46did and you know seven years down the line
191:49who knows where you'll be the final thing
191:52that i
191:52want to show you with this dashboard um you
191:54want to add some interactivity to the
191:56dashboard you
191:57want to make this so that when i click on
191:58something here it changes the other the
192:00other charts okay
192:01the quickest way to do this as a beginner
192:04is when you click on each chart you see
192:06that you get this
192:07little um admin pane that kind of turns up
192:09on the right hand side you get this gray
192:11border around
192:12the whole thing and then on the right hand
192:14side you get this ability to add some items
192:16the one you
192:17want to select is this one use as filter
192:19what that will do is it will make your
192:22chart behave like a
192:23filter we've not done filters yet but i'll
192:26show you those in a second when we do them
192:28that it
192:28means this chart can now control these two
192:31visualizations and to show you that i'll
192:33just
192:33go ahead and highlight these two and you'll
192:36see that both the tree maps change to
192:37reflect my
192:38selection okay if i don't drag anything
192:41maybe i'm just clicking around you can see
192:43that the maps
192:45everything the line charts are changing to
192:48reflect that change okay and when i des
192:51elect everything
192:52it goes back to the default now these line
192:54shots here aren't doing the same thing so
192:56to make those
192:56do the same thing i can just select use as
192:59filter in fact i can actually do this with
193:01the tree map
193:02as well select that and now every single
193:05visualization affects other visualizations
193:07here
193:08so if i want to look at this technology
193:10sector and see where those sales are spread
193:12you can see
193:13the trend line for that and also the
193:14interactivity at the top you can select the
193:17office supplies and
193:18it changes the visualization okay so this
193:21is an interactive dashboard doing a couple
193:24of absolutely
193:25fantastic things it's filtering and it's
193:27basically adapting to everything that you
193:29've set up okay
193:31now the way that is working is using this
193:34little icon but that icon adds what's known
193:39as a filter
193:40action a filter action is essentially an
193:43action that adds a filter to specific
193:45sheets so if i
193:47was to select this new york city item for
193:50example then i go to my tree map and
193:52instead of going back
193:53to it here on the bottom i can actually go
193:56directly to it by hitting this square okay
193:59so i go to the
194:00square you'll notice if you look very
194:02closely that it's now added something
194:05called an action so this
194:06is what i mean by filter action when we
194:08were clicking the charts that creates a
194:11filter action
194:12and that actually sends an instruction to
194:14tableau to add a filter up here to the
194:16filters pane and so
194:18that maybe makes you wonder well how do i
194:20add my own filters to this okay well i can
194:23go ahead and
194:23remove this filter action you'll see it
194:25goes back to how it should look like when
194:27we built it
194:28i can close the formatting pane and then on
194:30the left hand side we can actually go and
194:32get
194:32anything we want in this case let me just
194:34go and get the category so it's super clear
194:36that
194:36i'm filtering a specific color out i can
194:38drag the category onto filters and you'll
194:41see you get this
194:42window now this filters pane is really
194:44advanced i don't have time to cover
194:46everything here
194:47but just know that you can filter in lots
194:49of different ways using wildcard searches
194:51conditional statements and even top and
194:54bottom filters set up in lots of different
194:56ways but we
194:57don't have time to cover all of that we'll
194:59just stick to the basic ones if i deselect
195:02furniture
195:02and hit apply you'll see that it filters
195:05out the blue item and so you probably want
195:07to see well
195:08how do i make this an interface element
195:10okay well if i remove this category again
195:13just to bring
195:14everything back the quickest way to add a
195:16filter is to actually select right click
195:18and show filter
195:19because what that does is it adds the
195:22filter it doesn't give us that interface
195:25and it also
195:26gives us the filter on the right hand side
195:29and this allows us to go ahead and control
195:31it so i
195:32can now just select items like so and you
195:34can see the filter is working as i expected
195:36and if you
195:36filter everything out obviously you get
195:38nothing in your chart so this is exactly
195:40how it works okay
195:40so that is working nicely so then you're
195:42probably wondering well how do i change the
195:45way this filter
195:45looks well if you click on this little
195:47arrow on the right hand side you have a
195:49range of options
195:50you can do the single value lists where you
195:52can only choose one at a time okay and that
195:55's a
195:55specific style you might go for you might
195:57choose a drop down list and where you can
195:59choose multiple
196:00values like this so you can go ahead and
196:02select two or more values or as many as you
196:05want all of
196:05these stylings just live here on the right
196:07hand side so play around with these see
196:09what they do
196:10learn how they work now the other thing oh
196:13what did i just do there what did i just do
196:16there okay
196:17include values sorry um the other thing i
196:20did right there that i didn't mean to do i
196:23wasn't
196:23going to cover but now i've done it i have
196:26to explain it to you is the filters can
196:29flip the
196:29way they work so at the moment anything you
196:31take is going to be shown in the
196:33visualization but i
196:35can actually flip it the other way around
196:38so now anything i select gets removed so
196:40you can invert
196:41the way the filter works just by taking
196:44these two options here at the bottom
196:46include or exit
196:47that flips the way the filter works you see
196:51right the very final thing is if i go back
196:54to my
196:54dashboard now you're probably wondering
196:56well how do i bring the filter here i'd
196:58like to use the
196:59filter on this page so users can change how
197:01things work so let me go ahead and go to
197:04this little uh
197:05toolbar and you'll see you get a bunch of
197:07new options just for this chart one of
197:10which is a
197:11filter and i can go ahead and choose the
197:13filter that i want in this case it's going
197:15to be category
197:17and as soon as i select it you see it shows
197:19up up here now when i select it this is
197:22great but
197:23it's not affecting the whole visualization
197:25so how do i get it to do that well if i
197:27select the drop
197:28down for this you can see that i get this
197:30option to apply to worksheets and there's a
197:33couple of
197:33options here but actually if i select apply
197:36to worksheets and go across you can see
197:38there's an
197:38option here for selected worksheets and all
197:41you want to do is select that and then you
197:44can go to
197:44this option here that says select all on
197:47this dashboard so on this dashboard is
197:49three charts
197:50and if i go ahead and tick it you'll see
197:52that it puts a tick next to each of those
197:54okay the thing
197:55to remember with this filter is that it
197:57belongs to the tree map okay so you can see
198:00the tree map
198:01is grayed out that's how you know it
198:02belongs to the tree map if you ever wonder
198:04where the filters
198:05have gone why they're not working just make
198:07sure they belong to the right chart because
198:10that might
198:10be what's actually controlling everything
198:13okay so go ahead and select okay and now my
198:15filters
198:16affect everything okay i've got this
198:18selection here for some bizarre reason um
198:20but yeah now my
198:21filters affect absolutely everything and i
198:24can use this filter to switch on categories
198:27now i'm
198:27only looking at office supplies but again
198:30if i click on different elements then i can
198:32see the
198:33sort of behavior work okay so this is a
198:35really nice feature set because it allows
198:38you to do a
198:38couple of different things it makes the
198:40dynamic really interactive and it makes it
198:43super um you
198:43know sort of valuable okay so the more the
198:46more filters you add the more sort of
198:48control you're
198:49giving users but don't get too trigger
198:51happy with filters they all can there are
198:54too many filters
198:54can slow a dashboard down i've seen people
198:57with workbooks with 10 filters that's too
198:59many in my
198:59opinion about five is the absolute max if
199:02you need more maybe you need to work more
199:04with these kinds
199:04of interactions where you're clicking
199:06something on the chart to do the filtering
199:07rather than having
199:08the filter shown on the page okay good work
199:12so we have brought our charts together let
199:17's just go and
199:18strike that making dashboards interactive
199:22okay the thing calculations and functions
199:31we haven't needed to do this yet and it
199:36okay so with calculations and functions in
199:40tab way
199:40two two things are important earlier on let
199:45's go back to where we had a box bullet
199:50chart so when
199:50we when we created this chart we created a
199:53calculation with cells plus 20 percent and
199:57for
199:57that value we did this calculation okay and
200:01the only thing i want to cover in this uh
200:06specific
200:07lesson for this particular thing is the
200:09types of calculation so row level versus
200:11aggregate
200:12calculation uh hold on let's just look at
200:15the question from diablo diablo which i
200:17think is
200:18important to filtering would you say it's
200:20better to better practice to just let them
200:21filter from
200:22the dashboard versus adding the filter or
200:25is it case by case um it's definitely case
200:27by case
200:28often someone's going to be telling you
200:29what they want um but it's also a little
200:31bit about user
200:32experience and user design so try and do
200:34the best thing that works the mess easiest
200:37way one of the
200:38things you'll find is as you build dash
200:40boards things don't work the way you think
200:41they're
200:42going to work once people start using them
200:43so just pay attention to how people are
200:45using them and
200:46you'll get the answer very quickly okay so
200:50back to row level calculations versus
200:53aggregate
200:53calculations and the best way to show you
200:56this is to weirdly go to excel so over here
201:00i have i have
201:01another computer running and microsoft
201:03office and i have a backup computer which i
201:06've remoted into
201:07that i always have and in this particular
201:10setup what i want to do is just clear this
201:14okay and we're just going to do some simple
201:17maths and the reason i'm doing this is to
201:19show you the
201:20difference between a row level calculation
201:22and aggregate calculation and this is
201:24important just
201:25for calculations and you're going to
201:27probably need to do calculations yourself
201:28when you're
201:29setting things up so that's why i want to
201:31show you this okay so let's say we have
201:33some fruits
201:33okay and we have a customer and we have
201:42john
201:42who buys an apple and a pear he buys
201:48quantity
201:50two one that will do then we have lucy let
201:56's say a very very simple names he buys an
202:02orange
202:04and she buys five okay and we have the
202:09quantity and then we have what i'm going to
202:12say the total
202:13price okay so total of what they've bought
202:16so we can actually maybe put a pound sign
202:19this might
202:20seem like really basic stuff to you but
202:21just bear with me while i explain this
202:23because super
202:24important okay so total price they pay let
202:26's say two pounds four pounds eight seven
202:29pounds
202:29just arbitrary prices okay so then comes
202:32the analytical questions all right and the
202:36first
202:36analytical question you might want to
202:38answer is you know what's the average price
202:41of each fruit
202:42okay and to do that you could probably just
202:46take um well for each fruit the average the
202:50price is
202:50just going to be uh this divided by that so
202:53the total total cost divided by the
202:55quantity so let's
202:56go ahead and do that so we can say this
202:59equals that divided by that okay that gives
203:03you the
203:03price and we can go ahead and fill down so
203:07price per fruit and that that makes a lot
203:11of sense
203:11hopefully you guys are still following
203:14along and that was called a row level
203:18calculation because
203:18what we did is we for each line so this is
203:21line one for each one we're going to do the
203:24same thing
203:25this is line one for line two line three
203:27what we did is we did a calculation that
203:30checked the
203:30total divided it by the quantity which
203:34gives us the price per fruit okay now the
203:37problem you have
203:38is that in tableau there's two ways of
203:40specifying a calculation and people get
203:42confused which way
203:43they should do it and which way they
203:46shouldn't and it gets more interesting if i
203:48was to ask you
203:50well what is the total um what is the
203:53average price of each transaction so
203:57transaction belongs
203:58to one customer so you can see here you've
204:00got the customer john who buys two has two
204:03rows in the same
204:04in the same sort of thing the reason he has
204:06two rows is because this data set is
204:08happening at the
204:09fruit level of detail so it's happening
204:11each fruit get it gets its own line so
204:13there's actually only
204:14two customers and so for each transaction
204:17the total what we have to do is we actually
204:20have to
204:20end up adding these two so six plus um four
204:23plus two six and then seven plus six gives
204:26us the total
204:27okay so the average transaction price would
204:30actually be four plus two which would be uh
204:33six
204:34and then six plus seven divided by two
204:36because it's actually only two transactions
204:40that is an aggregate calculation because
204:42what we're doing is we're adding up
204:44everything in the
204:45column if i was to go and say what's the
204:46total quantity of everything in this
204:48particular
204:49transaction the total quantity is going to
204:51be five plus one plus two so you're adding
204:53everything in
204:54the quantity column if i go and ask what's
204:56the total cost of everything in this data
204:58set
204:59it's everything vertically but if i want to
205:01go and ask what's the average what's the
205:03price per fruit
205:04it's a row level calculation because i'm
205:05just doing it on the right so hopefully
205:08that explains
205:09to you the importance because if you start
205:11doing averages and calculations and you don
205:14't understand
205:14whether they're happening at the row level
205:17or at the data set level where you're
205:20aggregating
205:21everything up you're going to get
205:22completely the wrong answer completely the
205:24wrong answer and it
205:25really depends on the question you're
205:27asking and so how does this look on like in
205:29tableau well
205:30if i go back to tableau you'll see here and
205:34let me just comment this and to comment a
205:38calculation
205:39i can just do this first of all let me make
205:41it larger so this is a
205:43if i do forward slash star star backslash i
205:50can add a comment so this is a aggregate
205:56calc okay
206:00whereas cells multiplied by 1.2 is known as
206:07a row level calculation okay
206:10the row level calculation is going to be on
206:18each row doing this maths and then if i
206:22decide to
206:22aggregate this up it's going to be adding
206:25that all up whereas an aggregate
206:27calculation will first
206:29add all the cells up then multiply it by 1.
206:322 this is a subtle difference but it means
206:36radically
206:36different things depending on the analytics
206:38questions you're answering and so this this
206:41takes a little bit of time to explain for
206:43new users but the best thing the best thing
206:45i can
206:45sort of explain to you is look if you're
206:47doing some maths and you've got your
206:48calculator and
206:49it doesn't seem right don't just take the
206:51visualization for granted and assume it's
206:54correct actually get a calculator
206:55especially if you're new to tableau just
206:57have a calculator on
206:58your phone and do the maths yourself to
207:00make sure you're arriving at what you
207:01expect to be the answer
207:03i can't tell you how many times sort of
207:05gone back and forth with the client or with
207:08anyone who just
207:09you're just basically making sure that you
207:11're calculating the right average at the
207:13right level
207:13of detail to come to the right answer yeah
207:16in some organizations they even have weird
207:19ways of doing
207:20averages for example they won't do the
207:21average across the whole data set they'll
207:23take the average
207:24of the average in some cases for different
207:26business units because that's just what
207:28they've
207:29done even though that's not necessarily
207:31correct so that's another sort of example
207:33to watch out for
207:34the other thing to note about calculations
207:37is you've got this little arrow that some
207:40people
207:40don't realize allows you to open an
207:42external window which gives you all the
207:44documentation
207:45on additional calculations and it's just
207:47like excel in excel you kind of get these
207:50sort of
207:50groupings number string date type
207:52conversions and all of these are pretty
207:55well thought through
207:56the reason i won't cover these in now is
207:58because surprise surprise you know what i'm
208:00about to say
208:01i have a whole playlist on this so if you
208:05go to youtube and go to just my channel not
208:10my
208:10live stream and go to playlists why can't i
208:13find this oh there it is youtube keeps
208:16changing the
208:16interface right there we go tablo functions
208:19so if i go to that specific list there we
208:21go
208:21and there's a playlist so i have 23 videos
208:25covering all the functions in groups and
208:29individually as well so you can see some of
208:31these are 30 minutes long just on that
208:34function or just
208:35on that group so if you added all these up
208:37it's easily longer than even this crash
208:40course so go
208:41ahead and check out all these functions you
208:43can kind of get a sense for the crucial
208:45ones to watch
208:46because you can see by the view counts that
208:47those are the ones that most people are
208:49watching so if
208:49you're not sure what to do just go i think
208:52if you do it in from top to bottom it's got
208:54the most
208:54recent ones at the top and then if you go
208:55down you can see these are the ones that
208:57don't matter so
208:57much because they don't get used that much
208:59but the ones that get used the most people
209:01search for the
209:02most are these ones at the top so learn
209:03those get comfortable with them and then
209:05you're pretty much
209:06good to go okay good right the very final
209:10thing we need to do is put our dashboard
209:15somewhere for
209:15people to see now if you're using Tableau
209:18Creator as we covered right at the
209:20beginning what you have
209:21access to is Tableau Cloud or Tableau
209:23Server to publish up this workbook so to do
209:26that if you
209:27just go to the top and select server and
209:30sign in you should get an option to sign in
209:33at some point
209:34maybe today is not it's not playing ball so
209:37maybe what i'm going to do is i'm going to
209:40force it to
209:40kind of hurry up a little bit by selecting
209:42publish workbook there we go and i don't
209:44actually want to
209:45log into my work server i want to log into
209:47Tableau Cloud because that's the server
209:49that
209:49i'm going to be using today and so you just
209:51enter your details
209:52and that has worked or hasn't it worked
209:57that has worked
209:59you can see the spinner is coming up there
210:03you go and you've got default i've got the
210:07name
210:07live stream which is what i'm going to use
210:10um the projects are just folders on your
210:12Tableau
210:13online website so you will typically be
210:15told where to publish if you don't know
210:17where to publish
210:17ask someone who's already in the
210:19organization and they should be able to
210:21tell you which of
210:22these folders you're going to be publishing
210:24to folders in Tableau's world and also
210:26known as
210:26projects so that's basically all you need
210:28to know about that the default folder
210:30should not be visible
210:31to you if it is you need to talk to your
210:34server admin just sort that out okay don't
210:37tell them
210:37it's just not good practice to have the
210:39default folder visible because the only
210:41reason the default
210:42folder exists is because it acts as a
210:44template not for people to actually put
210:47content in so you want
210:48to make sure you're publishing to something
210:51else i'll select 90 cells and i'll give it
210:53a name
210:54live stream 8th of jan okay you can give it
210:56a description this will show up and if you
211:00don't
211:00want to publish everything maybe you only
211:02want to publish the dashboard you can see
211:03here that i can
211:04hover over and i see all the different
211:06charts that i have access to and all of
211:08them are ticked
211:09if i go down here and i select only dash
211:11boards you'll see that it deselects pretty
211:13much every
211:13single one and it only ticks the dashboard
211:16which is right at the bottom here okay now
211:19when you
211:19publish up it takes everything in the work
211:22book with it so even though the dashboard is
211:24the
211:24only thing that shows when you go to edit
211:26it or when you download it and then edit it
211:29everything
211:29is still going to be this it's not that you
211:31're not it's not that you're deleting these
211:32you're just
211:33hiding this from being visible on the
211:35server but they're still there they're just
211:37not visible to
211:38you anyone other than the old author so my
211:40first dashboard that's all done and you can
211:44play around
211:44with permissions again i've got a video on
211:46that data sources i've got a separate video
211:48on that so
211:48i'm not going to go too much in depth on
211:51those but this is the basic publishing
211:53settings in the latest
211:55versions of tableau there is something
211:57called the workbook optimizer which tells
211:59you how to improve
212:00performance on your dashboard and if you go
212:02to that and you expand it you'll see that
212:04it tells
212:04you a little bit about what you could do to
212:07improve your data source if you're a new
212:09user to
212:10tableau don't worry about these right from
212:12the get-go because they might do things you
212:14don't
212:14really want to do but it's a great way to
212:16start learning about what the implications
212:20are for each
212:20of these and tableau has a nice link on the
212:23end of each one of these that tells you why
212:25that
212:26specific action is actually a good thing to
212:28go and you know do so if you click on learn
212:30more it takes
212:30you off to an instruction and actually in
212:33the latest version of tableau you've got
212:36the ability
212:36to take action just by selecting one of
212:39these two icons okay so if i just go ahead
212:41and select publish
212:42we're going to ignore these errors it
212:45brings this window back up we can go ahead
212:47and select publish
212:49it'll say for this workbook to be scheduled
212:51or refreshed it must have embedded
212:52credentials
212:53and essentially i'm just going to try and
212:55embed everything because i connected to a
212:57server
212:58to connect to snowflake at the beginning of
213:00this it's going to go ahead and get my
213:02details and put
213:03it inside of the workbook so for now we'll
213:05just click yes and let's try it one last
213:07time if it
213:08doesn't work we'll just have to i'll
213:10probably have to edit this video and put
213:13put a working publishing
213:15demo and just assume there's some sort of
213:17bug going on at the moment with tableau
213:18cloud so
213:19i'm going to the 22.4 demo we're going to
213:22call this live stream eighth of jam
213:27i will publish this up everything's
213:30included in the workbook still the same
213:33error i don't know
213:34what's going on there um the only thing i
213:38can think of let's try one last thing i'll
213:42open up a
213:43oh we already have a workbook uh running so
213:46this is another workbook that i set up as a
213:49sample
213:49workbook i'm just going to show you the
213:51publishing working hopefully so this is
213:53another computer
213:54another workbook i am logged in as the same
213:58user so let's go ahead and we'll try and
214:00put this in
214:0122.4 everything as is go ahead and hit
214:05publish and you see it works this time so
214:08what must be happening
214:09is i have an issue with my mac that's the
214:12only difference between these two that's
214:15the only
214:15difference between the settings and that
214:18issue has meant that i'm essentially seeing
214:21a bug when
214:21i go up and publish because um mac os vent
214:24ura is not officially supported by tableau
214:27and on top of
214:27that m1 macs are not officially supported
214:30by tableau so for that reason that's why
214:33this sort
214:33of came up but if the publish works you
214:35should just literally get an exact copy of
214:38your workbook
214:39shown up on the browser you'll see each of
214:41the tabs and now you're pretty much good to
214:43go you
214:44can now share the link to this particular
214:47page or you can go off and share this with
214:50other people and
214:50get it to work okay good so um diablo
214:54thanks for thanks for googling a little bit
214:58and the the reason
215:00i have this backup set up here if i go back
215:03to this workbook um it's exactly the same
215:06login you
215:06can see that it's the same user that i've
215:09got on uh this this workbook so going into
215:12the same server
215:13exactly the same setup um the uh data
215:16sources are embedded inside of this
215:18particular workbook so
215:20again there should be no issue with them
215:22just sort of going up with the server but i
215:25think the issue
215:25is to do with my version of um mac os i'm
215:30using 22.4 but i'm also on a mac okay and
215:35this version
215:36of mac is not officially supported by table
215:39au at this current moment in state and so
215:41that bug is
215:42likely some sort of incompatibility with
215:44the way it's working with the files or
215:46permissions or
215:47something this is just stopping it from
215:50sort of publishing it up and what i might
215:52do in the edited
215:53version of this video is i might go back
215:55and re-record that without that sort of
215:58whole
215:58troubleshooting but i'll leave it in this
216:00live live recording so that at least some
216:02people have
216:03the benefit and then i can explain sort of
216:05what's going on but it's an important thing
216:07to just bear
216:07in mind that if you're not using supported
216:09hardware sometimes these things are just
216:11going to break
216:12and um yeah but good thing i have a backup
216:16oh god it's so typical but anyway there we
216:19go you saw how
216:20to publish your workbook essentially all
216:21you're doing is you're publishing it up so
216:23other people
216:23can see the work and once it's been
216:26published um you can go ahead and uh you
216:29know share it with
216:30people and they can start using it um i
216:32have another video that explains tableau
216:35cloud and
216:35tableau server already so i won't do that
216:37here um but this is actually what it looks
216:40like this is
216:40how you share your visualization it gets
216:42put into a folder amongst other
216:44visualization and bits of
216:46work and people go and click on it this is
216:48what they sort of arrive at and they can go
216:51in and
216:51start using it as a dashboard and they can
216:53just sort of carry on and work with it okay
216:56now the
216:57other thing i wanted to show you is how to
217:00publish to tableau public okay because
217:02tableau public um
217:04yeah one what i wanted to show you how to
217:06do tableau public because tableau public is
217:09probably
217:09what you might be using to get like a free
217:12um uh use of tableau so you might want to
217:14publish your
217:15work there instead so to do that what i'm
217:17going to probably need to do is we're going
217:20to build a very
217:21very quick chart so you're going to kind of
217:23see me speed building here so we're going
217:25to build
217:25the chart very very quickly and for the
217:27record i've been using tableau a while so
217:30what i'm doing
217:31here very quickly is just me trying to kind
217:32of get through this but once you start to
217:34use tableau a
217:35lot you'll get very very familiar with how
217:37to use tableau and it'll become like muscle
217:39memory so
217:40we're going to connect to orders once that
217:43's there we're going to go to sheets and i'm
217:46going to
217:46create a city map we're going to put uh
217:49sales on size it's going to complain a
217:52little bit about the
217:53um man it's really slow today isn't it look
217:57at this and my computer's my computer's not
218:01a slow
218:01computer either we'll put cells on size we
218:04know the geographies are wrong so let's go
218:07ahead and
218:07create that and fix that quickly this
218:10should come from country and region state
218:13and province should
218:14come from state and province and that
218:16should go ahead and fix everything there we
218:18go size
218:20we'll bring this right back up we'll give
218:22that a nice white border excellent that's
218:25our first chart
218:27uh we'll go bring a line chart we show
218:29cells over time i want this broken down by
218:32month there we go
218:34and then i'll go build a table showing us
218:37the cells for each quarter i'll go ahead
218:41and put
218:42that in the text and we want this to be
218:44broken down by subcategory and i'd like
218:47this to be a
218:48square filled and we can put profit on
218:50color you'll notice that kind of broke
218:53along the way
218:53but i was fine with what it was doing
218:55because i know where the end result is so
218:57there we go
218:57we built three charts very quickly we'll
219:00get up a dashboard um don't know why the
219:02dashboard is this
219:03size this is such a random size so oh it's
219:06because it's a range that's why oh who left
219:08this on range
219:09i must have done a range myself at some
219:11point um so here we go we've got three
219:13sheets i'll double
219:14click them bring them in this is a very
219:17nasty chart so what we'll do is we'll um
219:20for this one
219:23hmm i think i'll put these two side by side
219:25and i'll take get this to kind of sit on
219:27the edge
219:28and we'll go ahead delete the containers
219:30and delete everything on the side we'll get
219:33this
219:33to fill the width okay and i'll maybe push
219:37this up and get it to fill the entire view
219:41let's see
219:42can it do that yeah there we go so now we
219:44've got that we can set these to be
219:46interactive
219:50so now when i click on a data point it
219:52filters the table i'm able to click on book
219:55cases and just
219:56filter this out by bookcases okay so really
219:59good basic chart now we're going to publish
220:01this up to
220:01tablet public you see when i go to server
220:04there's no option to do that so instead we
220:07go to file save
220:08to tablet public it's going to ask us to
220:10log into tablet public at which point i
220:12forget my login for
220:15that so i'm going to immediately fire up
220:19one password it might already be logged in
220:23no i wish
220:23for thinking so there you go so it's
220:27logging in now we're publishing up to
220:29tablet public
220:30it's going to ask me what i want to save it
220:33as i can call this um my first workbook hit
220:39save
220:42and now it starts sending it up to tablet
220:44public and when it's done it will load up
220:46the web page
220:47and unlike tablet cloud it looks slightly
220:51different and this is what it would look
220:53like
220:54okay there you go so there you go it's your
220:56first workbook you don't get all the
220:58security
220:59and the permissions you get with tablet
221:00cloud all the governance stuff it's not
221:02there if you
221:03want to edit it here don't forget right at
221:05the beginning i showed you that if you go
221:06to this
221:07icon up here you can select edit and edit
221:10it in the browser without having to go back
221:13to
221:13edit it in the desktop okay so you can
221:15change things around change the titles
221:17everything as
221:17you'd expect pretty much as i showed you
221:19all the sheets are there and you can go
221:21ahead and sort of
221:22work with that okay so that's pretty much
221:26it in a nutshell that's um how to go from
221:29zero to a
221:30dashboard to publishing it up on tablet
221:33public or tablet cloud and or tablet server
221:35even and yeah
221:36you're pretty much golden good so yeah i
221:39did god it took a little bit longer to get
221:41to the end of
221:42that but we we got there okay so there we
221:44have it that's the entire tableau desktop
221:46crash course
221:47complete this is the first one we're doing
221:49we're going to be doing more on tableau
221:51prep tableau
221:51cloud and tableau service so subscribe and
221:53stay tuned for those we'll be doing those
221:55over the
221:56next few months so check those out now the
221:58very beginning of the video i hinted at
222:00something i
222:01hinted at the idea of a full-on proper
222:03course made by tableau tim and in order for
222:06me to do that i
222:07really want to collect a few bits of
222:09information about you the audience i'd love
222:11to know what do
222:12you really want to see in a course and more
222:14importantly there are also a couple of
222:15things
222:16i'd really like to understand about the
222:18individual countries and markets you're
222:19coming from obviously
222:20i get data from youtube but when it comes
222:22to courses i think you have to be more
222:24specific
222:25about why people are sitting courses are
222:27they doing it for work are they doing it to
222:29progress
222:30themselves professionally are they
222:31investing in themselves or is their
222:33organization going to be
222:34supporting them through this journey all
222:36those things are things i'd love to know
222:38from you
222:38directly as my audience and so i put up
222:40this little form it's still up on the
222:42screen as a qr code
222:44it's going to take you less than 30 seconds
222:46to fill it in so please please fill it in
222:48let me know
222:48what you think and there's also an option
222:51on there for you to let me let you know
222:53when i actually have
222:54a course available so what will happen is
222:56whatever you tell me you're interested in
222:58if you tick the
222:59box to say let me email you when i have
223:01that available i'll obviously be doing that
223:04as well
223:04so bear that in mind when you fill in the
223:06form and the other thing i really want to
223:08know the other
223:09thing i'd really love to get a better
223:11insight from the community is is which
223:13which other tools are
223:14you using alongside tableau that's also in
223:16the survey i know tableau is not the only
223:18tool used
223:19but i'd love to know are you using tableau
223:21in conjunction with other tools and if so
223:24what would
223:25be the top of the list i have an idea of
223:26what i'd put at the top of the list but
223:28maybe i'm wrong
223:28maybe you guys are pushing the frontiers of
223:30what's actually possible with tableau and
223:32pairing tableau
223:33with things that i've never even heard of
223:35so also in that form there's going to be a
223:37few options
223:37there to say what other technologies are
223:39you using with tableau and that might just
223:41inform what i
223:42think will be one of the best courses on
223:45tableau that might might just get built
223:47very soon let me
223:48know in the comments let me know in the
223:50form and hopefully i'll catch you in the
223:52next live stream
223:53or crash course that we do here on this
223:54channel thanks for watching and as ever we
223:56'll catch you
223:57in the next one
224:00you
224:03[ Silence ]
Join Tim Ngwena, a Tableau Visionary and experienced instructor, for a crash course on Tableau Desktop. With a background in training thousands of people both in person and online, Tim is the perfect guide to help you take your data analysis skills to the next level. In this live stream, you’ll learn the basics of Tableau and pick up tips and tricks for creating data visualizations. If you’re looking for new challenges in 2023 and want to master the art of data visualization, this is the perfect opportunity. Don’t miss out – sign up now and get ready to dive into the world of Tableau with Tim.
Resources: https://github.com/timngwena/tableautim\_tutorials/tree/main/Tableau/tableau-crash-course
Timestamps 0:00 Intro 1:29 Housekeeping 2:39 Introductions 4:26 What is Tableau? 5:57 The Tableau Platform 10:20 Tableau Licensing 00:13:17 Tableau Public 00:15:46 Tableau Versions 00:21:17 Tableau Public vs Desktop 00:39:00 Installing Tableau 00:40:31 Finding the correct Tableau documentation 00:43:42 Tableau Connection Interface 01:22:02 Tableau Main Interface 01:29:17 Finding data to practise with 01:32:11 How does Tableau Work? 01:35:14 Building your first Chart 01:41:40 Building a Bar Chart in Tableau 01:47:35 Building a pie chart in Tableau 01:55:04 Building a line chart in Tableau 01:56:37 Discrete vs Continous Behaviour 02:02:38 The Analytics Pane 02:03:57 Build a scatter plot 02:06:22 Build a histogram in Tableau 02:11:49 Build a bullet graph in Tableau 02:19:48 Build a box and whisper plot 02:25:16 Build a Treemap in Tableau 02:29:01 Build a heatmap in Tableau 02:34:58 Build a range of maps in Tableau 02:55:52 The problem with Show Me 03:01:59 Seeing Everything you’ve built 03:03:51 Building a basic dashboard 03:12:10 Make your dashboard interactive 03:19:30 Calculations in Tableau 03:29:29 Publishing to Tableau Cloud 03:36:58 Publishing to Tableau Public 03:42:02 Building a Tableau Course
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