Tableau Desktop is a self service business analytics and data visualization suite that anyone can use. With tableau desktop, you can extract massive data offline from your data warehouse for live up to date data analysis.
Tableau Online / Tableau Server is an online hosting platform designed for enterprise users. It lets users working on Tableau publish and share dashboards across organization and teams.
Tableau Reader is a free desktop application that enables you to open and view visualizations that are built in Tableau Desktop.
Tableau Public is a free Tableau software which you can use to make visualizations but you will need to save your workbook or worksheets in the Tableau Server for anyone else to view them.
All fields in a data source have a data type. The data type reflects the kind of information stored in that field, for example integers (410), dates (1/23/2015) and strings (“Wisconsin”). The data type of a field is identified in the Data pane by one of the icons shown below.
Data type icons in Tableau
Icon | Data type |
Text (string) values | |
Date values | |
Date & Time values | |
Numerical values | |
Boolean values (relational only) for example True/False | |
Geographic values (used with maps) | |
Cluster Group |
Source: Tableau website
Measures contain numeric, quantitative values that you can measure. Measures can be aggregated. When you drag a measure into the view, Tableau applies an aggregation to that measure (by default).
Dimensions, on the other hand, contain qualitative values (such as names, dates, or geographical data). You can use dimensions to categorize, segment, and reveal the details in your data. Dimensions affect the level of detail in the view.
We can either connect live to your data set or extract data into Tableau.
The benefit of Tableau extract over live connection is that extract can be used anywhere without any connection and you can build your own visualization without connecting to database.
You can read a complete section on how to extract data in Tableau from this book, Learning Tableau 2019 - Third Edition, written by Joshua Milligan. This book takes you through the foundations of the Tableau 2019 paradigm to the advanced topics.
Joining tables and blending data sources are two different ways to link related data together in Tableau. Joins are performed to link tables of data together on a row-by-row basis. Blends are performed to link together multiple data sources at an aggregate level.
In Tableau, filters are used to restrict the data from database. Often, you will want to filter data in Tableau in order to perform an analysis on a subset of data, narrow your focus, or drill into detail. Tableau offers multiple ways to filter data.
If you want to limit the scope of your analysis to a subset of data, you can filter the data at the source using one of the following techniques:
Dual Axis is an excellent phenomenon supported by Tableau that helps users view two scales of two measures in the same graph. Many websites like Indeed.com and other make use of dual axis to show the comparison between two measures and their growth rate in a septic set of years. Dual axis let you compare multiple measures at once, having two independent axis layered on top of one another.
If you want to learn how to design dashboards in Tableau, this book Learning Tableau 2019, will give you a step by step process for designing dashboards.
Once you have automated reporting, you’ll have time to spend on innovative projects. What can be done manually could be performed by automation, delivering the same results in a fraction of the time. Reducing such a time-consuming and repetitive task will make you more productive, and more efficient.
A story is a sheet that contains a sequence of worksheets or dashboards that work together to convey information. You can create stories to show how facts are connected, provide context, demonstrate how decisions relate to outcomes, or simply make a compelling case. Each individual sheet in a story is called a story point.
The primary objective of creating stories in Tableau is to communicate data to a certain audience with an intended result.
There is a feature in Tableau named as Stories that allows you to tell a story using interactive snapshots of dashboards and views. The snapshots become points in a story. This allows you to construct guided narrative or even an entire presentation.
Read this chapter, ‘Telling a Data Story with Dashboards’ from this book, Learning Tableau 2019, to create insightful dashboards in Tableau.
You can embed interactive Tableau views and dashboards into web pages, blogs, wiki pages, web applications, and intranet portals. Embedded views update as the underlying data changes, or as their workbooks are updated on Tableau Server. Embedded views follow the same licensing and permission restrictions used on Tableau Server. That is, to see a Tableau view that’s embedded in a web page, the person accessing the view must also have an account on Tableau Server.
Alternatively, if your organization uses a core-based license on Tableau Server, a Guest account is available. This allows people in your organization to view and interact with Tableau views embedded in web pages without having to sign in to the server. Contact your server or site administrator to find out if the Guest user is enabled for the site you publish to.
Tableau Prep extends the Tableau platform with robust options for cleaning and structuring data for analysis in Tableau. In the same way that Tableau Desktop provides a hands-on, visual experience for visualizing and analyzing data, Tableau Prep provides a hands-on, visual experience for cleaning and shaping data.
‘Tableau Day’ highlights: Augmented Analytics, Tableau Prep Builder and Conductor, and more!
Alteryx vs. Tableau: Choosing the right data analytics tool for your business