Double congratulations to Rody Zakovich for being named a Tableau Zen Master of 2016-2017 and for winning the Viz of the Day on 9/9/2016! Rody deserves it absolutely! Rody has brought a great impact on the Tableau community in the last couple years, for which I am a witness.

In his latest viz, Rody has got a neat design for the tooltip. It has a well aligned box score table in it. Very delightful design!
When I saw the text table, I saw potential for further visualization. After some tweak, I got the following design of tooltips, where we see the visual comparison of scores at each quarter, half time and full time. Click the image to view the interactive version.
You might notice â–² and â–¼ for indicating win or loss. That is literally a single bit of information.

I believe every bit of information is worth visualizing. It can bring new insights and make a difference.

PS. This is part of a series of efforts to add visualization in the regular tooltips. Previous examples are
#TweakThursday 12: Likert Scale in Tooltips
#TweakThursday 4: Tooltips with Bar Chart

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  1. Very nice tweak Alex! I actually thought of doing this, but decided against because I thought the large tooltip was distracting, but seeing it here, it does add a lot of value. And thank you for your kind words! Really enjoying this series, we have to chat sometime on ASCII charts/characters in Tooltips. Check out my post here for a way to shorthand calc them http://growingupdata.blogspot.com/2016/07/more-ascii-and-string-charts-in-tableau.html. REPLACE(SPACE(CALC)), makes it easier to be dynamic!

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    1. Rody, yes we should chat about it. I didn't know your blog before. Will add it to my watch list. Your blog on the ascii art and formula is very nice. Thanks for the pointer!

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(Refresh the page if you want to view the gif image multiple times. Or go to Tableau Public and click the button at the top-right corner.)

Jake and I collaborated on a dashboard. He told me that he learnt a way to create an in-place help page in Tableau. He first saw it at a conference somewhere and couldn't recall who the speaker was. So I am blogging here about it but the credit goes to somebody else. If anyone knows who the original creator is, leave a comment below.

The key idea is to float a semi transparent worksheet on top of the dashboard, where a help text box is strategically placed on top of each chart. This way, we can explain how to view each chart and what data points are important, etc. This worksheet is collapsible by a show/hide button. 

Below I would like to show how this worksheet can be constructed.

1. Sheet with a single data mark.

  • Double click the empty space in Marks panel and add two single quotes. Make the null pill a text label. This creates a single null mark.
  • Set the view as "Entire View"

2. Create an show/hide button

  • Go to the target dashboard
  • Drag a floating vertical container to the dashboard, making it cover all the area of interest.
  • Drag the Single Null Mark sheet and drop it into the above container. Hide the sheet title.
  • Create an open/close button for the container and place the button at the top-right corner.

3. Add annotations

  • Format the sheet background opacity as 70% in the layout manager             
  • Select area annotations and place them anywhere of interest. 
  • Write help text and format it to highlight important messages.  
  • The text can serve as functional guide and/or insight guide.

Here is an example. Feel free to download the workbook and explore. Click the "i" button at the top-right corner to view the in-place help. 

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