![]() To save the data, right click anywhere in the screen and select “Save As…” and give it a name, such as “ your_name.json”: Import to TableauĪs Tableau can read JSON files natively, we can open the JSON file directly in Tableau Desktop without any data prep required: This is the JSON data that has been returned by the Tableau Public API. After a few seconds, something similar to the below should appear on screen: Once you have your URL, paste it into a browser and hit return. index – this is the starting point for the count, so let’s say I have 200 visualisations and I want to extract the data in two batches of 100, the first call would end with: ?count=100&index=0 and the second call would end with: ?count=100&index=101. ![]() Josh notes that the API can time out if you go above 300, so if you have more than 300 visualisations on your profile then, first of all, congratulations! that’s pretty good going secondly, you’ll need to make multiple API calls, and that’s where the second parameter comes in. I’ve set this to 100 as that’s how many visualisations I have on my profile.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |