As an enthusiastic user of Sankey charts, I am excited to learn that a Sankey chart type is being piloted in Tableau Public (Web Edit only). I wrote about Sankey chart design in multiple posts. Sankey chart may appear in different forms depending on applications. 

I played a little with it just to evaluate it. Here are my initial findings and comments.

1. The basic Sankey

I can quickly create a Sankey with 2 dimensions and 1 measure. This is great! 

I noticed that two new marks cards are being used: Level and Link. The two dimensions are placed in Level card and the one measure is placed in Link card.

Comments:

- The text labels are showing by default and not editable. I understand the design choice. More details can be put in the tooltips. Note that the measure is showing in percentage and not the measure itself. That's fine in Sankey. But I hope we can format the percentage. Currently we can't.

- The Label card is no longer the same as in other chart types. The labels have option to show on links/branches that are selected or highlighted or both.

- The Color card provides options to a number of color palettes. We as user can't assign color to each member of a dimension. It's pretty rigid. The coloring of the links follows that of the left level/dimension with a lower opacity. I wonder if we should have option to use the colors of either left or right level/dimension for those of the links.

2. Sankey with Level Padding

We can add vertical spaces between the members in sidebars. This is what we have been doing when creating Sankey charts. The option is in the Level card as shown below. This is being called Level Padding. The padding size can be adjusted appropriately. 

3. Sankey without Sidebars

In the Level card, we can minimize the sidebars by adjusting the Level Width.

Comment:

I would ask that we have the option to minimize/hide either of the sidebars. The need arises in the building of multi-level Sankey chart, where we cascade single Sankey's. Then one of the two sidebars in a single Sankey would be redundant. We need to be able to hide/minimize it. 

This way, we will expand the utility of the Sankey chart type to building multi-level Sankey chart.

4. Sankey Label Showing when Selected or Highlighted

In the Label Card, we have the option to only show labels when a branch is selected or highlighted. This is neat, saving some effort of creating action filters.

5. Further expectations

Funnel chart is an important chart. It can be derived from multi-level Sankey chart. This can be done with a few more hiding options and cascading. The hiding is for a subset of members in a sidebar level/dimension.

6. Summary

Overall, the new Sankey chart type is easy to use. I am very happy about its pilot trial.

With a few additional tweaks, I think it can be applied to a wider area of use cases such as multi-level Sankey chart and Funnel chart.

The above example charts can be viewed on Tableau Public and explored in Web Edit. But you can not download it because the pilot is in web edit only.

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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.

(Addendum: Jonathan Drummey has a much better Tableau-only solution that I missed from his presentation. I only caught later part of the presentation. You might ask him about it if you know him.)

In a recent presentation, Tableau visionary HOF Jonathan Drummey talked about a solution for a variable row heights in a text table. The question apparently came from a perfectionist tableau designer. Tableau is not really made for text processing.

[Forward: I asked ChatGPT o1-mini who then wrote this. Hope it helps. All the credit and the blame go to ChatGPT.

I went over the plan and it looked decent. Whether it can be done in 30 days or not, it depends on the person and the time he spends on it. By the way, ChatGPT can be a really good study buddy. Ask it questions whenever you have any.]

This comprehensive 30-day plan is designed to take you from a Tableau beginner to an advanced user.

Mundane charts are those basic ones that all data visualization beginners can create, possibly with Show Me in Tableau. They are the boring ones at times because many people tend to create fancier ones just to show off. 

I actually like the mundane ones a lot because they are not only easy to create but also easy to be read by the stakeholders.

Pareto chart is a very powerful tool, providing great insights into the data set and into the business at stake.

A while ago, Sharon came to me asking a question regarding Pareto Chart Multiples. That is, per each category, there is a Pareto chart. And we need to create Pareto charts for all the categories. This chart allows us to quickly view the few most important factors that matter to the majority of output in each category. 

Vilfredo Pareto (1848-1923) is the father of the 80/20 rule: 80% of output are produced by 20% of input. It works magically well through all the years.

[Update: The product manager Wilson Po alerted me that the Viz Extension is still a work in progress. It will not be part of the incoming version 2024.1. Instead, it will be released later in 2024. Just be patient]

Tableau 2024.1 is coming. I got a chance to test drive it. As I wrote a bunch of posts on Sankey chart tutorials in the past, I am most excited by the new Sankey chart type. Here I would like to share what I learnt. This is a quick preview. Your comments are welcome.

Buzzfeed recently asked Midjourney to draw images of people in 50 US states.  So the AI drawing tool created 50 images of couples that represent its perception of the people in each state.

I just put the images into a tiled map in Tableau. Each image is added as a background in each tile.

And also I added Viz-in-tooltips to enlarge an image to look at more details.

Feel free to download the workbook and explore it.
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The folks at Business Expert had a brilliant idea. They asked AI's perception on UK banks as a dog. I am inspired to do the same on US banks.

ChatGPT is asked to confess its perceptions on top US banks as a dog. Then Midjourney is tasked to generate the images. Check out what dog is matched to your favorite bank.

All are put together into a single-sheet Tableau dashboard. Feel free to check it out.

Through my previous post on the new Sankey chart type, I got in touch with Wilson, the product manager leading the development of this new chart type. I made some comments on creating multi-level Sankey via cascading of single Sankey's. He told me it can be done already by dropping more dimensions into the Level card.

As an enthusiastic user of Sankey charts, I am excited to learn that a Sankey chart type is being piloted in Tableau Public (Web Edit only). I wrote about Sankey chart design in multiple posts. Sankey chart may appear in different forms depending on applications. 

I played a little with it just to evaluate it. Here are my initial findings and comments.

1. The basic Sankey

I can quickly create a Sankey with 2 dimensions and 1 measure.
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