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Mastering Data Visualization with Microsoft Visio Professional 2016

You're reading from   Mastering Data Visualization with Microsoft Visio Professional 2016 Master the art of presenting information visually using Microsoft Visio Professional 2016 and Visio Pro for Office365

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785882661
Length 334 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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John Marshall John Marshall
Author Profile Icon John Marshall
John Marshall
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Data within Visio Essentials FREE CHAPTER 2. Understanding How Data Is Stored within Visio 3. Linking Data to Shapes 4. Using the Built-In Data Graphics 5. Using the Pivot Diagram Add-On 6. Creating Custom Master Shapes 7. Creating Custom Data Graphics 8. Validating and Extracting Information 9. Automating Structured Diagrams 10. Sharing Data Diagrams 11. Choosing a Deployment Methodology Index

The Visio file format

Since the 2013 edition, Visio files are Open Packaging Convention compliant, which means that most of the contents are accessible for programmers using some standard techniques. This means that package parts can be more easily extracted, and even modified, without recourse to the Visio type library. Before the 2013 version, Visio files were either binary or monolithic XML files (which were approximately 10 times the size of the binary files). Now that Visio files are zipped-up XML packages, there is greater scope for extensibility. For example, the Visio Web Access control in SharePoint 2010 used XAML to render the graphics on a layer over the top of the Visio binary file. The files had to be published as Visio Web Drawings (*.vdw) to be used, and only the linked Data Graphics content was automatically refreshable. Since the 2013 version, native Visio files are rendered in the Visio Web Access control without needing Silverlight, and any shape cell that is referenced...

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