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Learning Tableau

You're reading from  Learning Tableau

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784391164
Pages 340 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Joshua N. Milligan Joshua N. Milligan
Profile icon Joshua N. Milligan

Table of Contents (18) Chapters

Learning Tableau
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Creating Your First Visualizations and Dashboard 2. Working with Data in Tableau 3. Moving from Foundational to Advanced Visualizations 4. Using Row-level and Aggregate Calculations 5. Table Calculations 6. Formatting a Visualization to Look Great and Work Well 7. Telling a Data Story with Dashboards 8. Adding Value to Analysis – Trends, Distributions, and Forecasting 9. Making Data Work for You 10. Advanced Techniques, Tips, and Tricks 11. Sharing Your Data Story Index

Practical examples


Having looked at some of the foundational concepts of table calculations, let's consider some practical examples. We'll start with some simple ones and move toward complexity.

Moving Average

We've been looking at table calculations mostly in text-tables because this is a natural way to think about how they work. It's also a great way to build and verify table calculations prior to transforming the view into a more complex visualization.

The following is a view of daily website traffic for the www.VizPainter.com blog. Observe that the top time series displays a cyclical up-down pattern. What causes this? It turns out that most people visit the blog during the week. Very few individuals read it on weekends.

Seeing this pattern can be useful, but it can also be distracting if we really just care about the overall trends and pattern.

To "smooth out" the chart, the second Visits field on the Rows shelf uses the Moving Average quick table calculation to "smooth out" the chart with...

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