Documentation

Create & View Content

Introduction to the main elements of the user interface (UI) for editing dashboards and other views.

Personalization is a feature that saves certain changes you made while viewing a dashboard, report, or other view, such as the state of filters and parameters.

Edit, View, and Sandbox View are the options you see in the toolbar of a dashboard, report, or other type of view, depending on which mode you are currently in.

Styles and themes give you an easy way to apply predefined settings to your visualizations, components, or filters to give them a consistent style or to reuse previous settings.

Layers and groups provide ways to manage and organize elements on your dashboard, report or other view, and make changes to multiple elements at once.

This article shows you how dashboards can adapt to different screen sizes, and how to add a template grid that can help with its design.

This article shows you how to add your own images using simple drag-and-drop operations, plus other options.

This article shows you how you can drag other dashboards, reports, and other views onto your canvas.

You can embed dashboards and other views inside another view, and also filter them from the top level.

How to enable and use responsive dashboard mode.

A collection of design tips for designing dashboards, reports, and other views.

Use a dashboard template to define a common base or starting point from which to design dashboards.

Use the Menu component to easily add a menu of navigation options, submenus, and more to your dashboard or view.

Use the Tile Navigation component to give users a way to navigate to recently viewed, folder, or project items.

Some application functionality available for viewers, such as the ability to use the context menu, can be disabled on the view or visualization level.

A slideshow lets you display multiple dashboards and other views in sequence automatically, and export or send them together as one file.

This article introduces the concepts behind reports, which are one type of view you can create.

This walkthrough shows you how to design a pixel-perfect multi-page report with two levels of grouping or repetition.

You can add a table of contents to your report that will be automatically populated with entries identifying report content and its corresponding page numbers.

This walkthrough shows you how to use scorecards to create a customized table with complete control over layout and support for any visualization in its rows.

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