- What is the difference between vertical and horizontal containers in Tableau?
- What is the purpose of layout containers in Tableau?
- What is one reason to choose a tiled layout over a floating layout?
- What is difference between the tailed and floating in dashboard?
What is the difference between vertical and horizontal containers in Tableau?
A horizontal layout container resizes the width of the views and objects it contains; a vertical layout container adjusts height.
What is the purpose of layout containers in Tableau?
Layout Containers in Tableau 8 force spatial relationships between dashboard components. Conceptually, they allow the dashboard designer to format common elements and move multiple dashboard objects at the same time. Layout Containers come in one of two options: Horizontal or Vertical.
What is one reason to choose a tiled layout over a floating layout?
Tiled layouts ensure that each worksheet/object is fully visible, whereas floating layouts allow one worksheet to obscure the data in another when overlapped, which is especially problematic when using filters since the views that are created will be different.
What is difference between the tailed and floating in dashboard?
Tiled objects are arranged in a single layer grid that adjust in size based on the total dashboard size and the objects around it. Floating objects can be layered on top of other objects and can have a fixed size and position. Tiled Layout All objects are tiled on a single layer.