![]() ![]() It can happen, that field names differ in the. Go to Data -> Replace Data Source… and replace the current data source (“Sankey”) with the one you’ve connected to in Step 3 (“excel-direct.42458 Extract”).Ĭlose the original data source (“Sankey”), we don’t need it anymore. Open the Workbook and add a new data source by connecting to the. zip, then just about anything can open it. ![]() I’m using Ken’s Sankey Template Format 2 to demonstrate my approach here. search for “Templates” on Tableau Public) Yeah □! Using Tableau Public Templates Efficiently In this blog, I’ll describe a generic approach to connect your data to any (suitable) workbook available as a download on Tableau Public. #Tableau public sample data updateEven with the template workbooks available, it often needs blogs with accompanying Excel files or Google sheets, to update the workbooks, like described in this blog by Ken Flerlage or this one by Alexander Mou on the same topic (updating Sankey Templates) or this one by myself. ![]() Most of the time you’ll take inspiration from Tableau Public, and recreate a visualization from scratch. It’s actually not that easy to take a workbook from Tableau Public, and use it with your own data. However, there is one thing, that I’ve always found quite difficult with Tableau Public: That’s the learning part of Tableau Public, which cannot be valued highly enough. I’ve also taken lots of inspiration from the visualizations on Public, and learnt a ton, when I downloaded and reverse engineered the workbooks. I personally also made my first steps with Tableau on Tableau Public and used it ever since to share my own visualizations with the community. 2M authors who have published more than 5M visualizations and billions of views, these are the latest figures I’ve heart last year. Tableau Public is an incredible resource. Using Tableau Public Templates Efficiently ![]()
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