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{anchor:top} {toc: class=contents} h2. Overview {styleclass: Class=topLink}[top|#top]{styleclass} The first step in creating your chart is selecting the appropriate chart type to most effectively visualise your data. There are two methods for chart creation: # Auto Chart # Chart Selection h2. Auto Chart {styleclass: Class=topLink}[top|#top]{styleclass} The Auto Chart functionality provides some common component areas to be populated, and depending on what fields you drag into them, a chart will be generated. !01autoChart.png! {color:#CC0000}*Note:*{color} auto charts generate common chart types such as; Bar, Column, Scatter, and Line. If you are looking for a specific chart or specialty chart it would be better to select the type from the Chart Selection panel on the right. h2. Chart Selection {styleclass: Class=topLink}[top|#top]{styleclass} The following list of chart choices will assist you to make you selection. After you have made a selection it is easy to swap between chart types to see how your data might look with different visualisations. {section} {column: width=20%} !00selectChart.png! {column} {column: width=80%} h3. {expand:title=Analytical} ||Icon||Type||When to Use|| |!chart_xy_scatter.png!|*Scatter*|A scatter plot (points not joined) chart that allows the charting of 2 related attribute series. Can only be used if the data series are related. Useful for seeing trends in data that is not linear.| |!chart_histogram.png!|*Histogram*|Shows the number of times a given value occurs in the dataset.| |!chart_whisker.png!|*Box & Whisker*|A chart which gives a quick overview of series of values and their statistical properties.| |!chart_trellis.png!|*Trellis*|A segmented chart for which the behaviour is determined by the data selected.| |!chart_heat_grid.png!|*Heat Grid*|Plots the intensity of a metric across multiple categories.| bq. See [Analytical Charts分析グラフ] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Area Charts} ||Icon||Type||When to Use|| |!chart_area.png!|*Area*|You want to emphasize the magnitude of change over time. Use an area chart to show how much the value of a measure changes over time. |!chart_area_stacked.png!|*Stacked Area*|You want to emphasise the magnitude of change over time, while comparing multiple categories.| bq. See [Area Charts] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Bar Charts} ||Icon||Type||When to Use|| |!chart_bar.png!|*Horizontal Bar*|You want to highlight values for easy comparison and plot your numbers horizontally. Use a bar chart to place less emphasis on time and focus on comparing values.| |!chart_bar3d.png!|*3D Horizontal Bar*|Similar to the horizontal bar chart, but in three a dimensional form.| |!chart_bar_stacked.png!|*Stacked Horizontal Bar*|Categorical data, grouped or stacked to assist comparison. Use when part-to-whole comparison is important.| |!chart_bar_cylinder.png!|*Horizontal Cylinder*|Similar to the horizontal bar, but having chart components shown in cylindrical form.| |!chart_barprop.png!|*Proportional Bar*|Displays how close values in different categories came to the highest category value.| bq. See [Bar Charts] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Column Charts} ||Icon||Type||When to Use|| |!chart_column.png!|*Vertical Column*|You want to highlight values for easy comparison and plot your numbers vertically. Use a column chart to place less emphasis on time and focus on comparing values.| |!chart_column3d.png!|*3D Vertical Bar*|Similar to the vertical bar chart, but in three dimensional form.| |!chart_column_stacked.png!|*Stacked Vertical Bar*|Also referred to as stacked column charts and used when part-to-whole comparison is important.| |!chart_column_cylinder.png!|*Cylinder*|Similar to the vertical bar, but having chart components shown in cylindrical form.| |!chart_column_stacked3d.png!|*3D Stacked Vertical Bar*|Similar to the 3d stacked vertical bar chart, but in three dimensional form.| |!chart_column_layered.png!|*Layered*|Compares the contribution of each value to a total across categories.| bq. See [Column Charts] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Combination Charts} ||Icon||Type||When to Use|| |!chart_combined.png!|*Combination Charts*|Combination charts, in effect, superimpose one chart type above or below another. Use to improve clarity and highlight relationships between data sets.| |!chart_layered.png!|*Overlay Chart*|Use the line chart to emphasize a trend and bars to emphasize specific values. Line/Bar combinations may work better by de-emphasizing bars through the use of subtle colours.| bq. See [Combination Charts] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Financial Charts} ||Icon||Type||When to Use|| |!chart_fin_line.png!|*Financial Line*|Use this chart to display a trading value with a subchart displaying volume.| |!chart_fin_highlow.png!|*High Low*|Shows daily high, low, opening and closing values with tick positions corresponding to opening and closing values.| |!chart_fin_box.png!|*Candlestick*|Shows daily high, low, opening and closing values with different colour bars depending on the daily direction.| bq. See [Financial Charts] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Line Charts} ||Icon||Type||When to Use|| |!chart_line.png!|*Line*|You want to view trends over time by plotting data at points connected by lines. Use a line chart to plot many metrics.| |!chart_line3d.png!|*3D Line*|Similar to the line chart, but in three-dimensional form.| |!chart_z.png!|*Z Chart*|Trends over a short period of time; displaying the data, accumulative total, and moving total. | |!chart_step.png!|*Stepped Line*|A line chart where movement is shown in steps rather than straight lines.| bq. See [Line Charts] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Maps} ||Type||Icon||When to Use|| |!chart_map.png!|*Image Maps*|If you do not have GIS defined columns you can use the Image Maps to create heat maps - these are a good way to display metrics with a spatial element such as Revenue by State or Country You will only be able to render maps for which an image map has been defined.| |!chart_google_map.png!|*Google Maps*|Google Maps allow you to render location data points onto a Google map which will be displayed as a Yellowfin Chart - along with associated Google map widgets.| |!chart_gis_google_map.png!|*GIS Google Maps*|A Google map which uses GIS data for its marker coordinates.| |!chart_gismap.png!|*GIS Maps*|GIS Maps allow the rendering of complex GIS polygons. These can be used to render spatial reports on the fly based on the GIS data available in a report.| |!chart_gis_bubble.png!|*GIS Bubble Map*|A bubble map in which bubble positions are specified by GIS points.| |!chart_gismap_heat.png!|*GIS Heat Map*|A heat map where colours representing GIS points are blended based on intensity.| {expand} h3. {expand:title=Meter Charts} ||Type||Icon||When to Use|| |!chart_meter.png!|*Meter*|You want to measure the rate of change of a measure against pre-defined targets. Useful for dashboard reporting.| |!chart_meter_therm.png!|*Thermometer*|Vertical representation of the meter chart, indicating a range of qualitative indicators.| |!chart_meter_dial.png!|*Dial*|Used to communicate key performance indicators.| |!chart_big_num.png!|*Numeric Display*|Shows the value of a metric on a digital display.| bq. See [Meter Charts] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Pie Charts} ||Type||Icon||When to Use|| |!chart_pie.png!|*Pie*|You want to show the relationship of parts to the whole. Use a pie chart to highlight proportions rather than actual values. If it is important to show actual values in the chart, avoid using the pie chart type.| |!chart_pie3d.png!|*3D Pie*|Similar to the pie chart, but in three a dimensional form.| |!chart_pie_multi.png!|*Multi Pie*|Used to highlight individual component sizes in a system of multiple components.| |!chart_pie_donut.png!|*Ring*|Similar to the pie chart, but in a circular ring form.| bq. See [Pie Charts] for more information. {expand} h3. {expand:title=Special Purpose Charts} ||Type||Icon||When to Use|| |!chart_funnel.png!|*Funnel*|Used to show the status of stages in a process.| |!chart_proportional.png!|*Proportional Infographic*|Displays segments on an image, with the segment size representing metric value.| |!chart_comparative.png!|*Comparative Infographic*|Displays images sized in such a way to correspond to a metric.| |!chart_radar.png!|*Radar*|You want to compare data by integrating multiple axes into a single radial figure.| |!chart_waterfall.png!|*Waterfall*|Waterfall charts are a special type of Floating Column Chart. A typical waterfall chart shows how an initial value is increased and decreased by a series of intermediate values, leading to a final value.| |!chart_event.png!|*Event*|Maps the occurrence of events against the values of a numeric data set over time.| |!chart_time_heat.png!|*Week Density*|Shows the density of occurrences based on hour relative to other densities on the same day of the week.| bq. See [Special Purpose Charts] for more information. {expand} {column} {section} h2. Chart Selector Guide {styleclass: Class=topLink}[top|#top]{styleclass} !WhatChart7.png|thumbnail,border=1! \\ \\ {horizontalrule} {styleclass: Class=topLink}[top|#top]{styleclass} |
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