Tableau 10: New Interface and UX Design changes
I put Tableau 9.3 and Tableau 10 side-by-side to show you exactly how the new interface pulls your focus onto the canvas.
- Tableau 10's start screen greys out the Discover pane to draw attention to the Connect pane and reduce distraction.
- The canvas now fills the workspace immediately without needing to build a visualisation, with shelves greyed to keep focus on the canvas.
- Default colours have shifted from strong red/green to softer orange/blue, largely for accessibility and easier interpretation.
- Icons, marks elements and fonts have been refreshed, and titles are now seamlessly part of the canvas by default.
0:00Hey, Tim here, and today I'm going to be
0:03taking you through the new features in
0:05Tableau 10. In this video I'm going to
0:07focus on the visual design and I'm going
0:09to do this by comparing 9.3 with version 10
0:13side-by-side. So first let's
0:15open up Tableau 9.3. I already have it open
0:18here and in this view you have the
0:21Connect, Open and Discover pane. In the
0:24middle you normally have recent workbooks
0:27that you've opened and then at the bottom
0:28you have sample workbooks. And the
0:30Connect and the Discover pane have the same
0:32sort of blue background. In Tableau 10
0:35this design has changed and the main change
0:38that you'll notice straightaway
0:40is that the Discover pane has a greyed
0:42background. The vis-a-vis and the sections
0:45remain the same but it's been greyed out I
0:48think to focus your attention on the
0:50connection. You see in the previous design
0:52when you open Tableau you had
0:54this sort of battle going on between the
0:57Connect and Discover pane and sometimes
0:59your eyes would sort of take you away from
1:01what you're trying to do which is
1:03your work. So in version 10 they've made
1:06you focus on the Connect pane so that
1:08your eyes naturally dive into that and if
1:10you're looking for a healthy
1:11distraction the Discover pane is still
1:13there and you can still interact with
1:15it. The other subtle change here is that
1:17the font has been upgraded. If I just
1:19drag this to the side you'll notice that if
1:21you look at them side-by-side the
1:24font is ever so slightly lighter and ever
1:26so slightly smoother. Okay so that's
1:29the first key change. Now if I go back to 9
1:32.3 and I open a data source here I have
1:35samples EU Superstore cells and I do the
1:40same thing in Tableau 10 you'll notice a
1:42difference straightaway. So let me just
1:45switch back to 9.3. You have your
1:47dimensions and measures and pages, filters,
1:50marks, columns, rows and then you
1:52have your canvas. In Tableau 10 the canvas
1:56takes up the whole space
1:57straightaway. You don't have to build a
1:59visualization for that to happen and the
2:02columns, rows, figures, filters and marks
2:05are greyed out and then your dimensions
2:07and measures have a slightly softer feel
2:09and the whole focus around this design
2:11change I think is to make you focus on the
2:14canvas. Picture this as a tool like
2:17Photoshop or picture yourself as an artist.
2:19The canvas is what you focus on.
2:21Everything else is simply a tool that helps
2:23you achieve what you're trying to
2:25achieve and so by simplifying the design
2:27around the canvas and making the user
2:30focus on the canvas allows you just maybe
2:34to you know do your work in a
2:35slightly more efficient and better way and
2:37really sort of be ingrained in what
2:39you're doing. I mean that's my personal
2:41opinion of why the design has changed and
2:43I think that's been reflected in some of
2:45the blog posts that Tableau have been
2:46talking about. The other thing you'll
2:49notice is that the iconology has changed.
2:51So the icons have changed throughout the
2:53tool. The application icons have changed.
2:55This always happens between versions but
2:57also you have these marks icons that
2:59have also changed and when you click on
3:01those they also have subtly different
3:03elements within them and one thing you'll
3:05notice throughout Tableau 10 is
3:07that the defaults have changed and so here
3:10you can see the color panes are
3:12slightly different to what we're used to.
3:14If I look at the same ones in Tableau
3:169.3 you'll notice these are much darker
3:19sort of stronger colors and Morin Stone
3:22has done a great blog post on the Tableau
3:24blog about why these defaults are
3:25the way they are so please check that out.
3:28If we build the visualization you'll
3:31also see defaults behaving differently. So
3:34I'm going to build the visualization
3:36first in 9.3. I'm going to drag product
3:38name onto detail then I'm going to drag
3:41profit onto color and here Tableau makes a
3:45decision and uses the red and green
3:48coloring scheme to show me profit and loss
3:51and then I'm going to make this a
3:53scatterplot by dragging sales up top and
3:56then control dragging profit so that it
3:59copies the field and I get my scatterplot.
4:02It's a very simple chart.
4:03Just take a moment to just take this in,
4:06look at how it feels, look at where
4:09the canvas is. If we do the same thing in
4:11Tableau 10 for a start the canvas is
4:14already taken up the full page. I'm going
4:17to drag profit onto color this time then
4:20I'm going to drag product onto detail and
4:24notice that the colors are different
4:27straight away. Instead of choosing red and
4:29green Tableau have chosen orange and
4:32blue and this is I think largely to do with
4:35accessibility but also I think I
4:38just find it generally easier to interpret
4:40this color scheme compared to
4:43the previous one and if we carry on
4:46building this out, I think I might have
4:51put these the wrong way around so I'll just
4:53switch them out, you'll see there's
4:55a much lighter feel to the visualization.
4:57Tableau are trying to encourage you to
4:59have a slightly softer design touch and you
5:02'll also notice that the title is
5:05seamless, it's part of the canvas whereas
5:08before it wasn't even there and you'd
5:10have to go up to the worksheet and show the
5:13title to see the title, okay. And so
5:16these are very subtle but important changes
5:18and you'll see these happening
5:19throughout the whole of Tableau 10 and
5:22whether it's color, tooltips, information,
5:26the way everything is displayed has subtly
5:28changed and so I really encourage
5:30you to sort of dive around, kick around and
5:32see how many different things you can
5:33spot. That's been it for this video, in my
5:36next video I'll be focusing on dashboard
5:39design and formatting and see what changes
5:41Tableau 10 has brought about and
5:44maybe what we would like to see more of.
5:48That's been it, that's been me.
A brief video to walk through the new design of the interface and default elements within Tableau 10. this video was recorded using Beta 4