The Visual Analytics Design Best Practices webinar was presented by Patrick Lundblad, Senior Product Manager, and Adam Booth, Product Designer. This session was really interesting not only because it was full of tips about data visualization design, but also because the very interesting facts about data visualization history.
Showing posts with label Visualization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Visualization. Show all posts
QlikView: Quick tip #3 - Show links in straight tables
Sometimes you will be required to add links to redirect users to the original source of data. This usually happens when you are analyzing help desk information, and you need to check the original ticket. Instead of moving to your help desk system and look for the ticket, you can add a link in QlikView that redirects you to the one that you need to verify. In this quick tip, we will show you how to add links in a straight table. Current example has been applied to redirect users to posts in this blog, but the same approach can be used in other scenarios.
QlikView: Quick tip #2 - Fixed colors in charts
Let say that you are building a dashboard to analize data from a helpdesk system, and you have been requested to add a chart that shows the total of open cases by category (low, medium, high, and emergency). You create the chart, and everything looks fine except for the fact that when you start filtering the data you notice that the colors assigned to each category are not always the same (check the image below, if data is filtered to show only January tickets high is in red color, but if February is selected high is displayed in blue). In this quick tip we explain how to avoid this situation, and keep the color assigned to each posible value in a dimension fixed.
QlikView: Quick tip #1 - Show/hide elements using text objects
Sometimes, we have a lot of objects related that we want to keep in the same sheet. Containers can be an option to avoid crowded visualizations. They are easy to use, you can group and hide and display objects, but when it comes to style, you don't have too many options to play with. Instead, we can use text objects along with variables to display or not objects. In this quick tutorial, I explain how to do it.
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