Tableau Public Dashboards

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A dashboard is a collection of several views, letting you compare a variety of data simultaneously. For example, if you have a set of views that you review every day, you can create a dashboard that displays all the views at once, rather than navigate to separate worksheets.

Like worksheets, you access dashboards from tabs at the bottom of a workbook. Data in sheets and dashboards is connected; when you modify a sheet, any dashboards containing it change, and vice versa. Both sheets and dashboards update with the latest available data from the data source.

Tableau Public Dashbaords

Note: When you publish to Tableau Public, as the name suggests, these views are publicly accessible. This means that you share your views as well as your underlying data with anyone with access to the internet. When sharing confidential information, consider Tableau Server (Link opens in a new window) or Tableau Online (Link opens in a new window). Select Server Tableau Public Save to Tableau Public. In Tableau Desktop, open the workbook you want to publish. Select Server Publish Workbook. If the Publish Workbook option does not appear on the Server menu, make sure a worksheet or dashboard tab is active (not the Data Source tab). If necessary, sign in to a server. For Tableau Online, enter https://online.tableau.com. You can find Tableau's layout containers feature in the dashboard creation tab. It allows us to size and space charts for maximum 'fibonacci-ing.' By default, Tableau auto-sizes each viz as it is dragged onto the dashboard. In most cases, this is great! However, sometimes we want to change how each chart is displayed individually. On Tableau Public, anyone can interact with your views, or download your workbooks or data sources. For information, go to the Tableau Public website. Save a workbook. With your workbook open in Tableau Desktop, select Server Tableau Public Save to Tableau Public. Note: This option is available only if you've created a viz that contains.

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In Tableau, a story is a sequence of visualizations that work together to convey information. You can create stories to tell a data narrative, provide context, demonstrate how decisions relate to outcomes, or to simply make a compelling case.

A story is a sheet, so the methods you use to create, name, and manage worksheets and dashboards also apply to stories (for more details, see Workbooks and Sheets). At the same time, a story is also a collection of sheets, arranged in a sequence. Each individual sheet in a story is called a story point.

When you share a story —for example, by publishing a workbook to Tableau Public, Tableau Server, or Tableau Online—users can interact with the story to reveal new findings or ask new questions of the data.

Tableau Public Dashboards Examples

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Tableau Public Dashboard Dimensions

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