![]() ![]() Good Knowledge on Tableau adminstrative activities in creating Projects,Users,Groups and Schedules.Extensive knowledge in various reporting objects such as Dimensions, Measures, Hierarchies, Filters,Actions, Calculated Fields, Sets, Groups, and Parameters.Well versed with Tableau & Reporting development best practices and performace tuning.Hands on experience on various Tableau functionalities like Tableau Extracts, Parameters, Filters, Contexts, Data Source Filters, Actions, Functions, Trends, Hierarchies, Sets, Groups, Calculations, Data Blending and Maps etc.Proficient in design and development of various dashboards, reports utilizing Tableau.Strong experience in trouble shooting, Performance tuning of reports, performing Root Cause analysis, Impact analysis, resolving issues within Databases,Tableau dashboards.Extensive experience in designing, developing and publishing visually rich and intuitively interactiveTableau workbooks and dashboards for executive decision making.Extensive working knowledge of all phases of SDLC and Agile/Scrum methodologies.Experience in Financial, Insurance and Consumer Domain.4 years of experience in working with Tableau Desktop, Tableau Server and Tableau Reader in various versions of Tableau /2019.Extensive experience in the full life cycle implementation of BI projects that includes: gathering Business Requirements, performing GAP Analysis, Designing, Developing, Testing and Documentation of business processes.Over 12+ years of experience in implementing Business Intelligence solutions for various clients across diverse business segments.This way’s slightly clunkier, but it’ll do the job when using Google Sheets as a data source isn’t practical or desirable. I’ve been using Alteryx to process my data and upload data directly into Google Sheets to use as my data source for this dashboard, so I can run the workflow every day without having to use the below method any more… Method 2: The ol’ re-upload You also have the option of requesting an update when I tested this, the data was updated about 10 minutes after I sent my request – quick enough for most TP dashboards. Create an extract / extracts of your Google Sheets data sources. When you publish to Tableau Public, Tableau will offer to embed your Google credentials and keep your data refreshed for you:įrom what I can tell, the data seems to be refreshed every day at 10am UTC. ![]() Use Google Sheets as the data source(s) for your Tableau workbook – it works in the same way as using Excel, with the exception that you’ll need to sign in to your Google account.This way you can append/modify data and have it flow through automatically into your dashboard. What Tableau hasn’t done a whole lot of shouting about is that when you upload a workbook with Google Sheets as a data source to Tableau Public, Tableau will offer to keep the data in your dashboard up to date with your Sheets. Sheets is Google’s spreadsheet editor and can be used as a data source for Tableau in much the same way as Excel. Tableau 10 now comes with a built-in connector to Google Sheets. So here they are: 2 ways to keep data in your Tableau Public dashboards up to date. Let’s start with the sleeker one: Method 1: Use Google Sheets as your data source In this post I’ll cover both methods – the previously existing if somewhat hacky way, and Tableau 10’s new Google Sheets connection. Good news! With the release of Tableau 10, there’s now a way of automatically refreshing the data in your Tableau Public workbooks, which brings the number of ways of updating your data in Tableau Public to two.
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