Register now to learn Fabric in free live sessions led by the best Microsoft experts. From Apr 16 to May 9, in English and Spanish.
Hi,
Is it possible to show data labels in Deneb for only values above a set value.
I have a visual which for the low values it clutters the x axis with all the data labels, so ideally i would only like to show data labels for larger values.
Thanks
JJ
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @DW868990,
Assuming you're using Vega-Lite, you can set the opacity for your text marks based on a condition, e.g. to show for a field named Sales with values over 1000, something like this would work:
"mark": {
"type": "text",
"opacity": {
"expr": "if(datum['Sales'] >= 1000, 1, 0)"
}
}
This uses an ExprRef to set the mark's opacity to 1 (fully opaque) if the condition is satisfied.
If you prefer to only plot marks for the values that satisfy the condition rather than make them invisible, in your text mark's layer, you could also add a filter transform that satisfies the condition, e.g.:
{
...
{
"transform": [
{
"filter": "datum['Sales'] >= 1000"
}
],
"mark": {"type": "text"},
...
}
...
}
As you're using expressions, the value doesn't need to be fixed, and you could use another field or other qualifier as the comparator.
Regards,
Daniel
Proud to be a Super User!
My course: Introduction to Developing Power BI Visuals
On how to ask a technical question, if you really want an answer (courtesy of SQLBI)
@dm-p - I saw this post you have used deneb. Please I need you help in reference dataset and column and measure in JSON for Deneb custom visual. I have posted a question based on this and the link is Custom visual based on seat allocation - Microsoft Power BI Community. Thanks
Hi @DW868990,
Assuming you're using Vega-Lite, you can set the opacity for your text marks based on a condition, e.g. to show for a field named Sales with values over 1000, something like this would work:
"mark": {
"type": "text",
"opacity": {
"expr": "if(datum['Sales'] >= 1000, 1, 0)"
}
}
This uses an ExprRef to set the mark's opacity to 1 (fully opaque) if the condition is satisfied.
If you prefer to only plot marks for the values that satisfy the condition rather than make them invisible, in your text mark's layer, you could also add a filter transform that satisfies the condition, e.g.:
{
...
{
"transform": [
{
"filter": "datum['Sales'] >= 1000"
}
],
"mark": {"type": "text"},
...
}
...
}
As you're using expressions, the value doesn't need to be fixed, and you could use another field or other qualifier as the comparator.
Regards,
Daniel
Proud to be a Super User!
My course: Introduction to Developing Power BI Visuals
On how to ask a technical question, if you really want an answer (courtesy of SQLBI)
Covering the world! 9:00-10:30 AM Sydney, 4:00-5:30 PM CET (Paris/Berlin), 7:00-8:30 PM Mexico City
Check out the April 2024 Power BI update to learn about new features.