Comments
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Will do, thanks Mark!
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"Problematic" is spot on. I had the same experience with single series charts, they work just fine. But I can't seem to find a workaround for a chart with multiple series. In our world we rarely use single series charts. We're almost always comparing/contrasting products, teams, or other metrics. In this example, I've got…
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Wizard! Thanks Grant.
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I've run into this a few times with slicer cards. One thing you can try (depending on your data) is messing around with the sort. An ascending/descending sort by count or sum of a group sometimes does the trick and doesn't affect the integrity of the card data.
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@ST_-Superman-_ Thank you for the suggestion! I don't think it'll work for us as the data frequently overlaps and hides the conversion numbers: But your suggestion prompted me to look at Line Bar, and this one seems to fit the bill. I wouldn't have looked at it without you suggesting the first one so many thanks!
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@ST_-Superman-_ Fixing the Hide Label feature would solve this. But if you have suggestions on a good chart for a conversion metric I'm all ears. Delivering this via multiple cards isn't really viable for our situation. If I had a bar chart that could do this I would be over the moon: I can show conversion on a chart, but…
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Opportunities is summed on the card, (1 or 0 in the dataset), formatted as a number. Evaluations is summed on the card (1 or 0 on dataset), formatted as a number. Opps/Evals is a Beast Mode that divides those sums, formatted as a percentage. I agree that it's likely a bug, it would explain why the labels behave differently…
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I about fell out of my chair when I realized that you can't set an order of dashboards for users. This is a critical functionality of any sane layout and an absolute must have.
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Maybe? I think it's because of the date sort. In the above example, two reps both had 16 sales, but because the top rep's sales happened before the other one (1/10/2023 vs 1/19/2023) that's why they're placed a row above.
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Thanks Grant