Thursday, 30 April 2015

Tableau Interview Questions and Answers


Here download pdf format 

1.           What is Data Visualization?

         Data visualization is, quite simply, the process of describing information through visual rendering. Humans have used visualizations to explain the world around them for millions of years. Data visualization allows for universal and immediate insight by tapping into our mind’s powerful visual processing system.

2.          Why is Data Visualization Important?

        Technological advances have made data visualization more prevalent and powerful than ever before, increasing the importance of business intelligence. Tableau leads the world in making the data visualization process available to business users of every background and industry. Businesses around the globe realize that the ability to visualize data effectively leads directly to better understanding, insight and better business decisions.
         Tableau Software enables businesses to keep pace with the evolving technology landscape and outperform competitors through an adaptive and intuitive means of visualizing their data.

3.           What is Tableau?

         Tableau is groundbreaking data visualization software created by Tableau Software. Tableau connects easily to nearly any data source, be it corporate Data Warehouse, Microsoft Excel or web-based data. Tableau allows for instantaneous insight by transforming data into visually appealing, interactive visualizations called dashboards. This process takes only seconds or minutes rather than months or years, and is achieved through the use of an easy to use drag-and-drop interface.
                                                         (Or)
         Tableau is business intelligence software that allows anyone to connect to data in a few clicks, then visualize and create interactive, sharable dashboards with a few more. It's easy enough that any Excel user can learn it, but powerful enough to satisfy even the most complex analytical problems. Securely sharing your findings with others only takes seconds.
        The result is BI software that you can trust to actually deliver answers to the people that need them

4.           What is Tableau Desktop?
Tableau Software provides software applications for fast analytical and rapid fire business intelligence.
         Tableau Desktop is a data visualization application that lets you analyze virtually any type of structured data and produce highly interactive, beautiful graphs, dashboards, and reports in just minutes. After a quick installation, you can connect to virtually any data source from spreadsheets to data warehouses and display information in multiple graphic perspectives. Designed to be easy to use, you’ll be working faster than ever before.
         Tableau Server is a business intelligence solution that provides browser-based visual analytics anyone can use at just a fraction of the cost of typical BI software. With just a few clicks, you can publish or embed live, interactive graphs, dashboards and reports with current data automatically customized to the needs of everyone across your organization. It deploys in minutes and users can produce thousands of reports without the need of IT services — all within your IT infrastructure.
         Tableau Reader is a free viewing application that lets anyone read and interact with packaged workbooks created by Tableau Desktop.

5.           What can I do with Tableau Desktop?

         Imagine being able to answer virtually any business question by dragging-and-dropping your data into a free-form visual canvas. You create beautiful graphs, reports and dashboards. You then share those results in just a few clicks. Using Tableau Desktop, you can build and interact with views of data. These views allow you to query, display, analyze, filter, sort, group, drill down, drill up, calculate, organize, summarize, and present data faster and more efficiently than ever before. With Tableau Sever and Tableau Public you can share and embed your live, interactive views, reports, and dashboards so that colleagues can interact, customize or monitor them.
         The various ways that Tableau can help you get more from your data are           discussed in more detail below.

        Visually Analyze Data Rapidly

 See and Understand

         People need effective views of data to understand results, discover relationships, find patterns, locate outliers, uncover structure, and summarize findings. how well can you see what is going on in your business?
        Tableau lets you ask rapid questions of your data by letting you iteratively create and modify live, interactive charts, reports and dashboards in minutes. These views are fundamentally more useful for analysis than those provided by pre-canned reports and traditional dashboards. Tableau gives you interactive visual tables, picture-perfect data displays, side-by-side comparisons, and graphic encoding using color, size and shape. Without any programming or training, users can see and understand data like they’ve never been able to before.

          Browse and Explore

         Tableau is the world’s leading exploratory browser for databases. A key step in the analysis process is the ability to start with “big picture” summaries of data and then quickly focus on detailed areas of interest.
         To conduct effective analysis, it is crucial for people to quickly change what data they are viewing and how it is being viewed. Tableau’s flexible interface enables this free form exploration. Exploratory analysis is further supported with unlimited undo and redo, allowing people to surf their databases much like they surf the web.

         Build Interactive Dashboards

         Build Dashboards People Can Understand

        Use Tableau to build dashboards that communicate clearly and directly. Each element of a dashboard presents information in the most effective way possible, based on the latest research in human perception. Tableau provides the display type that best expresses the data—bar and line charts, maps, tables, scatter plots, and more. Tableau helps you build dashboards that inform and impress.

          Monitor and Measure

         Use Tableau to build analytical dashboards that compare information and track performance against goals. These dashboards can be based on multiple data sources. They are fully interactive, allowing you to drill into and explore information directly from the dashboard. You can also apply common filters to all the worksheets, allowing you to change the filter and watch an array of visual displays update simultaneously.

          Interact and Drill-down

Sometimes you need to answer additional questions within a dashboard. With Tableau, viewers can dynamically filter, highlight, drill-down and link across multiple views in one dashboard. This essentially creates an interactive visual analysis application on the fly.

          Share and Interact

          Present

Imagine pasting Tableau’s vivid multi-dimensional results into Microsoft Office                          applications and sharing them with others. our users have a reputation for producing high-impact presentations that are easy to understand.

         Publish and Embed

        Share your graphs, reports, and dashboards by publishing them with Tableau Server. Anyone with proper data credentials can view and interact with those visualizations using just a browser. They can even save custom views, make comments, or even tag favorites. Don’t want people to visit a specific URL destination for their views? No problem—embed them in virtually any web application with just a few lines of code
6.          How do you create dashboard? Can you explain the life cycle?
                                  A dashboard is a collection of several worksheets and supporting information shown in a single place so you can compare and monitor a variety of data simultaneously. For example, you may have a set of views that you review every day. Rather than flipping through each worksheet, you can create a dashboard that displays all the views at once.
You can create a dashboard in much the same way you create a new worksheet.
Select Dashboard > New Dashboard.
                                Alternatively, click the New Dashboard tab along the bottom of the workbook. A new tab for the dashboard is added along the bottom of the workbook. Switch to the new dashboard to add views and objects.
                                When you open a dashboard the Dashboard window replaces the Data window on the left side of the workbook. The Dashboard window lists the worksheets that are currently in the workbook. As you create new worksheets, the Dashboard window updates so you always have all worksheets available when adding to a dashboard it.
                                After a view is added to the dashboard, the worksheet is marked with a check mark in the Dashboard window. Also, any legends or quick filters that are turned on for the sheet are automatically added to the dashboard.By default, dashboards use a Tiled layout, which means that each view and object is arranged into a single layered grid. You can change the layout to Floating to allow views and objects to overlap. See Organizing Dashboards to learn more about these layouts.
7.           How can you schedule the Reports in tableau? Explain briefly?

Schedules
when you publish workbooks that connect to extracts you can schedule the extracts to be refreshed automatically. That way you don't have to republish the workbook every time the underlying data has updated and you can still get the performance of a data extract. For example, let's say you have a workbook that connects to a large data warehouse that is updated weekly. Instead of publishing a workbook that queries the live data, you can create an extract including just the data necessary. This increases performance and avoids queries to the live database. Then you can add that workbook to a schedule so that the extract is refreshed at regular intervals with updated data from the data warehouse.Schedules are created and managed on the server by an administrator. However, an administrator can allow you to add a workbook to a schedule when you are publishing from

Tableau Desktop.

1. As you are publishing a workbook, in the Publish Workbook to Tableau Server dialog box, click Scheduling & Authentication.

2. In the Scheduling & Authentication dialog box, select a schedule for the workbook:
All data sources that require authentication must have an embedded password so that the extract can be refreshed. This includes data sources that are not extracts.




8.           When export a worksheet into tableau server how to give a connection to                                                                                                     database to run that report in server?



When you publish workbooks that connect to extracts you can schedule the extracts to be refreshed automatically. That way you don't have to republish the workbook every time the underlying data has updated and you can still get the performance of a data extract. For example, let's say you have a workbook that connects to a large data warehouse that is updated weekly. Instead of publishing a workbook that queries the live data, you can create an extract including just the data necessary. This increases performance and avoids queries to the live database. Then you can add that workbook to a schedule so that the extract is refreshed at regular intervals with updated data from the data warehouse. Schedules are created and managed on the server by an administrator. However, an administrator can allow you to add a workbook to a schedule when you are publishing from

Tableau Desktop.

1. As you are publishing a workbook, in the Publish Workbook to Tableau Server dialog box, click Scheduling & Authentication.

2. In the Scheduling & Authentication dialog box, select a schedule for the workbook

Publishing Data Sources In addition to publishing workbooks, you can also publish data sources to Tableau Server. A data source is a reusable connection to data. Publishing data sources allows you to centrally manage and store data sources. The published data can be located in Tableau’s data engine (extracts) or in a live, relational database. The published data source also contains field level customization such as calculations, groups, sets and default properties. This topic describes how to publish a data source to Tableau Server. To publish a data source to Tableau Server:

1. Select the data source on the Data menu and then select Publish to Server:

2. If you are not already signed in to Tableau Server, you see the Tableau Server Sign In dialog box.

Type the server name or URL (for example, sales_server, or https://sales_server) and click Connect.

3. Next, type your user name and password and click Sign In. If Tableau Server is configured to use Active Directory, type your Windows user name
(the domain is not required—except in multi-domain environments where the user is not in the default domain); otherwise, type your Tableau Server user name. If Tableau Server is configured to use SAML for user authentication, you won't see the above dialog box. Instead, you'll see a sign in prompt from an external identity provider.

4. You now see the Publish Data Source to Tableau Server dialog box.
Specify the following:

l Project: A project is like a folder that can contain workbooks and data sources.
Tableau Server comes with one project called Default. All workbooks must be published into a project.

l Name: Provide a name for the workbook in the Name text box.
Use the drop-down list to select an existing workbook on the server. When you publish using an existing workbook name, the workbook on the server is
overwritten with your workbook. You must be allowed the Write/Web Save As
permission to overwrite workbooks on the server.

l Authentication: If your data source requires a user name and password, you can specify how authentication should be handled when it is published to the server. The options available depend on the type of data source you are publishing.

l Add Tags: You can type one or more keywords that describe the workbook into the Tags text box. Tags help you and others find related workbooks when browsing the server. Each tag should be separated by either a comma or a space. If the tag contains a space, type the tag surrounded by quote marks (e.g., “Sales Quotes”).

5. You can specify permissions to allow or deny access to the workbook on the server. By default all users can interact with the workbook and you, as the publisher, are allowed all capabilities. See Setting Permissions for details, and see Permissions for information on the capabilities you can assign to users and groups.

6. If you are publishing an external file data source or a data source that is on a mapped drive select Include External Files. When you include external files, a copy of the data source is published. External file data sources include Excel, Access, Text, Data Extract, and image files. If you don’t include these files, others may not be able to see the worksheets online. If you do not want to publish the external files to the server, change the connection information so that the workbook references a full UNC path. For example rather than connecting to D:\datasource.xls, you would connect to
\\filesrv\datasource.xls.

7. Click Publish.

9.           What is the major difference between 7.0 and 8.0 in tableau? And latest?

·         New visualizations are introduced like tree map, bubble chart and box and whisker plot
·         We can copy worksheet directly from one workbook to another workbook
·         Introduced R script

10.     What are parameters and when do you use it?
Parameters are dynamic values that can replace constant values in calculations.                                          
We can create parameters in 3 ways:

                      1) Filters
                      2) Reference lines
                      3) Calculate Field
                            (Or)
Parameters are used when you want to change the static values.

How to use parameters -1:
How to use parameters - 2:

11.     What are the possible reasons for slow performance in Tableau?

One of the reasons is that filters may not be defined appropriately at report level due to which the entire data set is pulled from the query (which may not be necessary).
There are some of the reasons:

1) Creating a query that returns a large number of records from the underlying table(s), when a smaller number of aggregated records would suffice. You can check this by looking in the lower-left corner of the Tableau Desktop work space and looking at the number of marks. If this number is very large, you are potentially pulling a large amount of data from the database

2) Use native drivers: Tableau will recommend or require you to create a data extract to continue working with a particular driver. Usage of native driver instead ODBC connections as it will generally provide better performance.

3) Test with another tool: A good way to determine if a slow workbook is being caused by a slow query is to test the same query in another tool, such as Microsoft Access or Microsoft Excel.
To find the query being run, look in Aditya kommu\My Tableau Repository\Logs and find a file titled log.txt. Open this file and scroll up from the bottom until you find a section like the following:
The section between the begin and end query tags is the query that was passed to the database. You can copy this text and then use it from a tool like Access or Excel. If it takes a similar time to return as in Tableau, then it's likely the problem is with the query, not the tools.


4) Use extracts: Create a tableau extract if you having performance issues.
These extract files can include performance-oriented features such as pre-aggregated data for hierarchies and pre-calculated calculated fields (reducing the amount of work required to render and display the visualization).

FOR DBA point:
1)Tune your indexes :Make certain you have indexes on all columns that are part of table joins
·         Make certain you have indexes on any column used in a filter
·         Explicitly define primary keys
·         Explicitly define foreign key relationships
·         For large data sets, use table partitioning
·         Define columns as NOT NULL where possible
2) Use statistics Databases engines collect statistical information about indexes and column data stored in the database. These statistics are used by the query optimizer to choose the most efficient plan for retrieving or updating that.

3) Optimize the data mode: beneficial to create summary tables if most of your queries only need aggregated data - not base level details records.

12.       Can anyone explain about architecture of Tableau?

13.       What the Difference is between connect live and import all data and Import
some data?

·         Connect live – Creates a direct connect to your data. The speed of your data source will determine performance.
·         Import all data – Imports the entire data source into Tableau’s fast data engine as an extract. The extract is saved with the workbook.
·         Import some data – Imports a subset of your data into Tableau’s fast data engine as an extract. This option requires you to specify what data you want to extract using filters.
                                                      (Or)
·         Connect Live - By using this feature you can directly connect to live database. When you select this feature the performance will be reduced.
·         Import all data - By using this feature you can import all data into your local machine. This will be called an EXTRACT, file saved with the Extension of .tde (tableau Data extract).                            
·         Import some data - it is also like extract data but you can apply filters while importing data into your local system.
14.      What is Ad-hoc Reports in tableau? Explain?
Actually Ad-hoc reports means on the spot based on the client requirement by connecting to live environment we can create reports these reports are called Ad-hoc reports.
15.     What is the Difference between quick filter and Normal filter in tableau?

Quick filter is used to view the filtering options and can be used to select the option.Normal filer is something you can limit the options from the list or use some conditions to limit the data by filed or value.

                                      (Or)

Quick Filter always appears right side of your window and it showing what elements that you select. Normal filter always hide mode .but both work same...

                                      (Or)

Filter: - This is used to restrict the data from database based on selected dimension or measure. If u drags a dimension into filter shelf u can filter the data by selecting list of values. When dragging by measure u can select a range of values.

Quick Filters:- whatever u have applied filter, if u want give a chance to user for dynamically changing data members  at run time this is useful.
In this u r able to see only non restricted data members only...

16.      Does Tableau Public work on a Mac?
Macintosh users can view Tableau Public content in their browser. Tableau Desktop Public Edition used for authoring content is a Windows application only. If you are using a Macintosh computer that has an Intel processor, you can use virtualization software such as VMware Fusion or Parallels Desktop to install Windows and run Tableau Desktop Public Edition. Alternatively, you can use a built-in utility called Boot Camp to install Windows and run the Tableau software.
                                        (Or)
Yes, the latest Version 8.2 of Tableau Desktop can be installed on Mac as well.
17.     How do I automate reports using Tableau software?
You need to publish report to tableau server, while publishing you will find one option to schedule reports.You just need to select the time when you want to refresh data.
18.      How does Tableau perform with huge data sets?
           Due to VizSQL
19.       Name the components of dashboard?
·     Horizontal
·     Vertical
·     Text
·     Images etc
                      (Or)
1. Horizontal
2. Vertical
3. Text
4. Image Extract
5. Blank Page
6. Web [ URL ACTION ]
 
20.       How is Tableau so fast when working with databases?
                             Tableau compiles the elements of your visual canvas into a SQL or MDX query for the remote database to process. Since a database typically runs on more powerful hardware than the laptops / workstations used by analysts, you should generally expect the database to handle queries much faster than most in-memory BI applications limited by end-user hardware. Tableau's ability to push computation (queries) close to the data is increasingly important for large data sets, which may reside on a fast cluster and may be too large to bring in-memory.
                               Another factor in performance relates to data transfer, or in Tableau's case result set transfer. Since Tableau visualizations are designed for human consumption, they are tailored to the capabilities and limits of the human perception system. This generally means that the amount of data in a query result set is small relative to the size of the underlying data, and visualizations focus on aggregation and filtering to identify trends and out liers. The small result sets require little network bandwidth, so Tableau is able to fetch and render the result set very quickly. And, as Ross mentioned, Tableau will cache query results for fast reuse.
                               The last factor as mentioned by Eriglen involves Tableau's ability to use in-memory acceleration as needed (for example, when working with very slow databases, text files, etc.). Tableau's Data Engine uses memory-mapped I/O, so while it takes advantage of in-memory acceleration it can easily work with large data sets which cannot fit in memory. The Data Engine will work only with the subsets of data on disk which are needed for a given query, and the data subsets are mapped into memory as needed.
                                                   OR
                                  
                                Tableau does do some amount of in-memory storage to increase speed (when extracted), but a great portion of its speed actually comes from not having to store data in memory.

                                      This is because Tableau only stores the data relevant to your queries in-memory, whereas other solutions will store the entire set in memory, which can take more time to load.
                                               OR
                                      Tableau main feature "data engine" is really a cool feature. If you work with a large amount of data it takes some time to import, create indexes and sort data but after that every thing speedup. Tableau data engine is not really in-memory technology. The data is stored in disk after imported and then RAM is hardly utilized. This conception brings the desired performance.

21.        What is Tableau Desktop?
                  Tableau Desktop is a data visualization application that lets you analyze virtually any type of structured data and produce highly interactive, beautiful graphs, dashboards, and reports in just minutes. After a quick installation, you can connect to virtually any data source from spreadsheets to data warehouses and display information in multiple graphic perspectives. Designed to be easy to use, you’ll be working faster than ever before.
22.       What is Tableau Reader?
Tableau Reader is a free viewing application that lets anyone read and interact with packaged workbooks created by Tableau Desktop.
23.       How Does Tableau Work?
While Tableau lets you analyze databases and spreadsheets like never before, you don’t need to know anything about databases to use Tableau. In fact, Tableau is designed to allow business people with no technical training to analyze their data efficiently.
           Tableau is based on three simple concepts:
Connect - Connect Tableau to any database that you want to analyze. Note that Tableau does not import the data. Instead it queries to the database directly.
Analyze - Analyzing data means viewing it, filtering it, sorting it, performing calculations on it, reorganizing it, summarizing it, and so on.
Using Tableau you can do all of these things by simply arranging fields of your data source on a Tableau worksheet. When you drop a field on a worksheet, Tableau queries the data using standard drivers and query languages (like SQL and MDX) and presents a visual analysis of the data.
      Share - You can share results with others either by sharing workbooks with other Tableau users, by pasting results into applications such as Microsoft Office, printing to PDF or by using Tableau Server to publish or embed your views across your organization.
24.        When do you use horizontal and vertical components?
We can use these when we want to have all sheets or filter to move in single shot.. however we can still  create the dashboard without this also.. this allows us to make our work simple
25.          Can you explain about table calculations?
These are inbuilt calculations in tableau which we normally use to calculate Percentage from or for YTD and other calculations like the measure across table, below table and etc..
26.          How we can find the tableau Report Rendering Time.?
Report rendering time=Network time(request from URL to Report server) +Query execution time + Network time(response from SQL Server)+calculations(table column)+time taken to display the report in desired format(HTML/ pdf/ excel)
27.          VizQL is a visual query language?
VizQL is a visual query language that translates drag-and-drop actions into data queries and then expresses that data visually. VizQL delivers dramatic gains in people’s ability to see and understand data by abstracting the underlying complexities of query and analysis. The result is an intuitive user experience that lets people answer questions as fast as they can think of them.
We believe that VizQL represents a foundational advancement in the area of data analysis and visualization.
28.           Why should you use tableau?
There are many reasons why one should use tableau they are
It is very easy to use:
You don’t need to know programming of any sort, all you need is some data and tableau to create reports that are visually enchanting and which tells a story which you need to tell your managers or impress your professor in class.
With its revolutionary drag and drop feature u can easily create stories or reports using just  your mouse and a little imagination. All this is possible due to the revolutionary VizQL a visual query language.
29.        How many types of filters are there in Tableau.?
In Tableau, there are three types of filters.  More explicitly, there are three different ways to limit the data that is displayed by your graph. Each of these has its own strengths and weaknesses, and we will look at them one at a time.

These types are
Ø  Custom SQL "Filters"
Ø  Context Filters
Ø  Traditional Filters. 
Custom SQL Filters:
Custom SQL "Filter" is a WHERE clause that is placed in the SQL that queries the data to be used in the workbook.  "Filter" is a Tableau term that technically applies only to Context and Traditional Filters; however, the Custom SQL "Filter" emulates the behavior of a global Context Filter, so we will refer to it as such.  By construction, Custom SQL "Filters" are always global.  The most common reason for using a Custom SQL "Filter" is to limit the size of a data extract.  The smaller your data extract, the more quickly your charts will load.  In other words, you can make more complex charts without sacrificing efficiency.
One of the ways to create a Custom SQL "Filter" is during the Server Connection process.
Context Filters:
a Context Filter is a filter in Tableau that affects the data that is transferred to each individual worksheet.  Context Filters are great when you want to limit the data seen by the worksheet.  When a worksheet queries the data source, it creates a temporary, flat table that is uses to compute the chart.  This temporary table includes all values that are not filtered out by either the Custom SQL or the Context Filter.  Just like with Custom SQL "Filters", your goal is to make this temporary table as small as possible.
Context Filters have a few advantages over Traditional Filters.  First, they execute more quickly than Traditional Filters.  They are also executed before Traditional Filters and can be executed all at once, which further improves efficiency.  However, they do have one drawback.  It takes time for the filter to be placed into context.  A rule of thumb, from Tableau's Knowledge Base, is to only place a filter into context if it reduces the data by at least 10%.
A Context Filter is created by dragging a field onto the "Filters" Shelf and editing the filter.  Then, you can Right-Click the field on the shelf and select "Add to Context."  If you have multiple context filters, you can CTRL-Select them all and add them to context in a batch.  This will improve the efficiency of your filter.
Traditional Filters:
Traditional Filter is exactly what most people think of when they think of filters.  When Tableau is creating the visualization, it will check to see if a value is filtered out by a Traditional Filter.  Since this is not performed at the table level, it is the slowest of all filter types.  However, it does have the advantage of being performed after the Context Filters.  This is a necessity if you are dealing with complex "Top N" filters.  A Traditional Filter can be created by simply dragging a field onto the "Filters" Shelf.
30.        How to Improve Performance in Tableau.?
1. Use an extract.
There is nothing else that comes close to the efficiency gained using an extract.  If you don't absolutely need live data, extracting is the best bet.

2. Limit your dashboard to fully answering only one scenario.
At it's simplest, a dashboard should be able to fully explore a single scenario.  If your dashboard has six sheets, five actions, and 3 quick filters, you might not be looking at only one scenario.  Remember, no matter how elegant and comprehensive your solution is, if it doesn't run as quickly as the user would like it to, he or she will not use it.  I would not recommend butchering your dashboard so heavily that it cannot fully handle a scenario.  If the user has to go somewhere else to find the answer, why did they use your dashboard at all?

3. Limit the data being introduced to each worksheet.
If you are not planning on using a set of rows, you should filter them out of the data set as early as possible.  If your table contains all sales, and you only want to look at US sales, create a Custom SQL query that filters it out.  If the filter is worksheet dependent, try using a Context Filter.  For more information on filtering, check out my other post Types of Filters in Tableau.  You can also click the Down Arrow beside the word "Dimension" and Select "Hide All Unused Fields" to hide any fields you are not using in any of your worksheets.  I'm not sure if this improves efficiency; but I'd have to imagine that it does, less data should always improve performance.

4. Remove components that add no value.
While aesthetics are very important to building a usable dashboard, unimportant objects aren't worth losing efficiency over.  In fact, you would be better off adding more functionality than you would by adding a purely aesthetic object.

5. Eliminate any non-essential components from the visualization.
This refers to values that would appear on the Pages, Filters, and Level of Detail Shelves.  If they are purely there for the user to see if they scroll over a point, then they aren't adding any value to the initial glance.  However, I leave this as the last step because it should be a last resort.

In most cases, a little forethought can save you a lot of heartache when you are creating dashboards.  Decide exactly what story you want to tell, and tell only that.  It is much easier to add functionality to a small dashboard, than to butcher a large one.  Thanks for reading.
31.    What is Tableau Public?
        The free version of Tableau Public is for people. This includes writers, bloggers, students, professors, hobbyists, journeymen, critics, citizens and more. It?s also meant for organizations, but only as an introductory service. If your organization wants to put data online for the public, you are welcome to use this as an introductory service. If you like what you see, contact us at info-public@tableausoftware.com to discuss a commercial relationship.

32.     How does Tableau Public work?

Tableau Public includes a free desktop product that you can download and use to publish interactive data visualizations to the web. The Tableau Public desktop saves work to the Tableau Public web servers ? nothing is saved locally on your computer. All data saved to Tableau Public will be accessible by everyone on the internet, so be sure to work only with publicly available (and appropriate) data.

33.     I have my own blog or website. Can I use Tableau Public to share data there?
Yes. Use Tableau Public to share data and insights with your community. Embed the content in your blog or website, or share it via links on web pages or in emails. Use our website to find out how. Learn more about Sharing Views in the Knowledge Base.

34.     Is there a limit on storage space for the data?

Yes, there is a 1 gigabyte limit on storage space for data. For the vast majority of users, we expect that 1 GB will be more space than needed. Learn more about Data Requirements and Limitations in the Knowledge Base.

35.   Do I need to be a programmer to use this?

No programming skills of any kind are required. It is a simple drag and drop process that anyone can easily learn.

       36.    I work for an organization that has lots of data to share with the public. Can  we  use Tableau Public?

Yes -- as long as you and everyone at your organization together use less than 50 megabytes of space. Tableau Public gives your organization (e.g., a company, government agency or educational institution) the opportunity to explore its capabilities. If your organization wants to put data online for the public, please contact us at info-public@tableausoftware.com to discuss a commercial relationship.

37.    Do I need the free desktop product if I already own a commercial version of   Tableau Desktop?

No. Tableau Desktop comes in three editions: Professional Edition ($1,999), Personal Edition ($999) and Public Edition (free). If you already have Professional or Personal Edition, you will find that your latest upgrade includes the ability to publish to the Tableau Public servers. There is nothing in Public Edition that is included in the latest versions of the paid products.

38.    What type of data limitations does Tableau Public have?

Tableau Public can connect to Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Access, and multiple text file formats. It has a limit of 1,000,000 rows of data that is allowed in any single file. Learn more about Data Requirements and Limitations in the Knowledge Base.

39.     Can I set permissions or protect the data I save to Tableau Public?

All content saved to Tableau Public is accessible to everyone on the internet. As the author, you are the only one who can delete your own content, but anyone on the internet can view it. In addition to viewing it, anyone can download a copy of your workbook (including the underlying data) as well, which will let them work with and build upon your original.

40.    If I publish my data on Tableau Public. Is my data now public?

Yes, your data on Tableau Public is now accessible on the world-wide web and is down loadable by anyone. We strongly suggest you only publish data you are willing to share with anyone.

41.   What online blog services is Tableau Public compatible with?

Embedding Tableau Public content into a blog requires the blog software to                                  support embedded HTML content, including script tags. Some popular blog sites which are compatible with Tableau Public embedded content are:
         Blogger (by Google) – www.blogger.com

   Typepad – www.typepad.com Edit your posts in HTML mode rather than Rich Text, otherwise the Tableau Public embed codes don’t get preserved.

   Word press - www.wordpress.org. On this site you can download and install a software script called WordPress. To do this you need a web host. WordPress is completely customizable and can be used for almost anything.

   There is also a service called www.WordPress.com which lets you get started with a new and free WordPress-based blog, but it is less flexible than the WordPress you download and install yourself. Blogs hosted on Wordpress.com do not take advantage of tools like Tableau that use JavaScript.


42.    What kind of technology is a Tableau Viz?

   It is a thin AJAX based JavaScript application.

43.   How do people find the visualizations I save to Tableau Public?

Once you save your work to Tableau Public, it may be shared (by emailing a link or embedding the work in your blog, wiki, or website). If you embed the work onto a web page, anyone who visits the page will see the live interactive view. If you email a link, just clicking the link will open a browser page with the view loaded. Learn more about Sharing Views in the Knowledge Base.

44.    "What is the ""Download"" link on the Viz?"

Any Tableau Public viz can be downloaded by pressing the download link in the lower right corner. It saves to your computer as a TWBX file. Anyone with Tableau Desktop (Professional, Personal or Public Edition) can open the file and review or extend the work that was behind the original posting. Learn more about Downloading Tableau Public Workbooks in the Knowledge Base.

45.     Is there a plug-in required to see the Tableau Viz?

 No plug-ins are required. You just need a browser with JavaScript enabled.

46.    What happens if I delete a workbook from Tableau Public and there are links                        to it in blogs or other web locations?
Once a workbook or view is deleted from Tableau Public, it cannot be retrieved from Tableau Public by anyone. All links or other references to it that may have been shared will not be able to load the viz and will display an error message on the page.

47.    What do you mean by ""Data In. Brilliance Out.""?

This is our vision for Tableau Public. In captures both our twin goals of making Tableau incredibly easy to use and spectacularly powerful.

We can easily create a view that shows Key Progress Indicators (KPIs). To do this, you complete the following tasks:
Ø  Create the base view with the fields you want to measure.
Ø  Build a calculated field that establishes the figure from which you measure progress for the data you’re measuring.
Ø  Use shapes that Tableau provides that are designed specifically for KPIs.
This example shows how to build a KPI view that shows a green check mark for any sales figure over $125,000, and a red X for any sales figure under $125,000.


Ø  Cleanup dimensions and measure names.
Ø  Set attribute aliases.
Ø  Set default colors
Ø  Set default measure aggregations.
Ø  Create calculated fields
Yes, But it will be called as Compact list.
There should be a common dimension to blend the data source into single worksheet.

For example, when blending Actual and Target sales data, the two data sources may have a Date field in common. The Date field must be used on the sheet. Then when you switch to the secondary data source in the Data window, Tableau automatically links fields that have the same name. If they don’t have the same name, you can define a custom relationship that creates the correct mapping between fields.
Ø  Groups: No, we can not use Groups in calculation fields.
Ø  Sets: Yes, we can use Sets in calculation fields.
Creation time:
Ø  Groups – Combine dimension members into higher level categories.
Ø  Sets – Create a custom field based on existing dimensions that can be used to encode the view with multiple dimension members across varying dimension levels.

If you are applying filters to a large data source, you can improve performance by setting up context filters. A context filter is applied to the data source first, and then the other filters are applied only to the resulting records. This sequence avoids applying each filter to each record in the data source.

You may create a context filter to:
Ø  Improve performance – If you set a lot of filters or have a large data source,   the queries can be slow. You can set one or more context filters to improve performance.
Ø  Create a dependent numerical or top N filter – You can set a context filter to include only the data of interest, and then set a numerical or a top N filter.

What is Dual Axis.?
You can compare multiple measures using dual axes, which are two independent axes that are layered on top of each other. Dual axes are useful when you have two measures that have different scales.

For example, the view below shows Dow Jones and NASDAQ close values over time.

To add the measure as dual axis drag the field to the right side of the view and drop it when you see a black dashed line. You can also select Dual Axis on the field menu for the measure.
Creation time:
The two axes are independent scales but the marks are layered in the same pane.

Creation time:
Can we use Parameter in Filter.?
Yes, We can use.



What is page self..?
The Pages shelf is a powerful part of Tableau that you can use to control the display of output as well as the printed result of that output.
49.   Is there any new features implemented in tableau 8.0 regarding the tableau      server performance improvement?
1. Use an extract
2. Limit your dashboard to fully answering only one scenario
3. Limit the data being introduced to each worksheet
4. Remove components that add no value
5. Eliminate any non-essential components from the visualization
50.    What are the other settings I need to reconfigure to get better performance as                      I am using 7.0 tableau server and planning to upgrade to latest versions?Suggest best configurations based on the provided server details?
    Tableau 8,8.1 and 8.2 also supported for 4GB ram and core processors.
51.     How many viz SQL process should I run?
    Depending on Data Capacity
52.   How many extracts (extract type) can be used on a single server(without  effecting server performance like memory) ?
   Better 10
53.   How to check the performance step by step manner(DB, Report side, Network) in tableau report ?
  Go to help menu and select performance tuning option
54.   How to improve the tableau report performance?
If you are not planning on using a set of rows, you should filter them out of the data set as early as possible. If your table contains all sales, and you only want to look at US sales, create a Custom SQL query that filters it out. If the filter is worksheet dependent, try using a Context Filter. For more information on filtering, check out my other post Types of Filters in Tableau. You can also click the Down Arrow beside the word "Dimension" and Select "Hide All Unused Fields" to hide any fields you are not using in any of your worksheets. I'm not sure if this improves efficiency; but I'd have to imagine that it does, less data should always improve performance.

55.   I have one scenario like Year in integer and week in String and wanted to calculate the YTD.. how to do this.?
In Tableau, the relative date filter enables flexible analysis of time periods. Sometimes, however, you might want to see both year-to-date (YTD) and month-to-date (MTD) values for a particular measure on the same view. To accomplish this task, you can create date calculations.
Create a calculated column which replaces week from string to integer and make use this in another calculation for YTD.
YTD:

          MTD:
56.   What kind of join do you see in data blending?
There won't be any joins as such but we will just give the column references like primary and foreign key relation.
57.    What is data blending..? When do you use this.?
Data blending is when you blend data from multiple data sources on a single worksheet. The data is joined on common dimensions. Data Blending does not create row level joins and is not a way to add new dimensions or rows to your data.
We use this when we want to fetch data from different sources and make use in
single worksheet.
   

58.   Can we have multiple value selection in parameter?
         No
59.    What is Tableau Server?
Tableau Server is a business intelligence solution that provides browser-based visual analytics anyone can use at just a fraction of the cost of typical BI software. With just a few clicks, you can publish or embed live, interactive graphs, dashboards and reports with current data automatically customized to the needs of everyone across your organization. It deploys in minutes and users can produce thousands of reports without the need of IT services — all within your IT infrastructure.
60.   What is the Difference between connect live and import all data and Import some data.?
Ø  Connect live – Creates a direct connect to your data. The speed of your data source will determine performance.
Ø  Import all data – Imports the entire data source into Tableau’s fast data engine as an extract. The extract is saved with the workbook.
Ø  Import some data – Imports a subset of your data into Tableau’s fast data engine as an extract. This option requires you to specify what data you want to extract using filters.

61.    What does Tableau do?

        Our goal is to help people see and understand data. Our software products put the power of data into the hands of everyday people, allowing a broad population of business users to engage with their data, ask questions, solve problems and create value.

62.    Who are Tableau’s customers?

        Our products are used by people of diverse skill levels across all kinds of organizations, including Fortune 500 corporations, small and medium-sized businesses, government agencies, universities, research institutions and non-profits. Organizations employ our products in a broad range of use cases such as increasing sales, streamlining operations, improving customer service, managing investments, assessing quality and safety, studying and treating diseases, completing academic research, addressing environmental problems and improving education.

63.    When was Tableau founded?
   Tableau was founded in 2003 by Christopher Stolte, Patrick Hanrahan and  Christian Chabot.

64.    When did Tableau go public and where does its stock trade?                       

   Tableau Software is traded on NYSE under the ticker symbol DATA. The      company went public on May 17, 2013 at an initial public offering price of $31 per share.

65.    What are the main features of Tableau Software?

Tableau Software offers the following features:
Ø     Reporting & Dashboard
Ø     Data Analytics
Ø     Analytics
Ø     Business Intelligence
Ø     Ad Hock Query
Ø     Data Hierarchy
Ø     Data Mining
Ø     Multi-Dimensional Analytics
Ø     ODBC
Ø     OLAP
Ø     Analytics on Share Point, the iPad, Android tablets

66.    How much does Tableau Software cost?

We have the following pricing information for Tableau Software:
   Starting from: $999.00/year
Pricing model: Subscription
Free Trial: Available (No Credit Card required)

67.    Does Tableau Software support mobile devices?

Tableau Software supports the following devices:
Android, iPhone-iPad

68.     Does Tableau Software offer an API?

    No, Tableau Software does not have an API available.

69.     What are the main benefits of using Tableau Software ?

   Tableau Software offers the following benefits:
l  Tableau Software is faster than other solutions.
l  Tableau Software is an intuitive, drag-and-drop tool that lets you see every  change as you make it.
l  With Tableau Software you can build smart, fit and beautiful dashboards.
l  In Tableau you can connect directly to databases, cubes, data warehouses,   files and spreadsheets.

                                               Tableau Interview Questions
1.       What is the difference between heat map and tree map in tableau? Describe all 24 maps in tableau with explanation? 
2.       How many extracts (extract type) can be used on a single server(without effecting server performance like memory) ?
3.       Is there any new features implemented in tableau 8.0 regarding the tableau server performance improvement?
4.       How do you Writes codes for database access, modifications, and constructions ?
5.       How do you ensure data set continuity, accuracy and consistency ?
6.       How do you design data queries and calculations used to extract and format data for project reports and external presentations?
7.       How do you analyze data sets of your project ?
8.       How do you design reports/graphs/presentations using Tableau for specified projects ?
9.       What are the system requirements for the desktop software?





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