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I have a table that essentially looks like this:
SUPPLIER | CC# | Y/N |
Supplier X | 132-04-002 | Y |
Supplier W | 132-03-001 | N |
Supplier W | 132-04-007 | Y |
Supplier W | 132-03-003 | N |
Supplier W | 132-03-001 | Y |
Supplier X | 132-04 | Y |
Supplier X | 132-01-001 | Y |
Supplier W | 132-02-001 | Y |
Supplier Y | 132-03-001 | N |
Supplier X | 132-04-005 | Y |
Supplier Y | 132-04-007 | N |
Supplier X | 132-04-005 | N |
Supplier Z | 132-04-001 | Y |
Supplier W | 132-01 | N |
Supplier Z | 132-04-005 | N |
Supplier W | 132-04-007 | Y |
Supplier W | 132-03-003 | N |
Supplier Y | 132-04-004 | N |
Supplier W | 132-01-002 | N |
Supplier W | 132-01-002 | N |
Supplier Z | 132-01-003 | Y |
Supplier X | 132-01-004 | Y |
Supplier Z | 132-02-002 | N |
Supplier Y | 132-01-003 | Y |
Supplier X | 132-02 | Y |
Supplier X | 132-04 | N |
Supplier Y | 132-03-003 | N |
Essentially, I'd like to find a way to display the suppliers across the Y access, the CC# across the X access and only include the "y" values (which can be replaced by a number value if it makes displaying it easier). I'd like to have it feature something like the ribbon visualisation where it connects suppliers from x value to x value. In a correlation chart, this would like essentially be like a table where there is a color where there would be a "Y" value and nothing where there is a "N" value. The idea is to be able to easily identify where suppliers offer certain capabilities so that I can easily see where they overlap. Ideally, I'd add another column that indicates the amount of spend we have with a supplier in that capability. So that I can see where we might be able to consolidate spend and reduce our number of suppliers... Does that make sense?
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