MicroStrategy ONE
Designing the right interactive document
The following table lists common goals for interactive documents and provides suggestions on how to achieve them. This table is also useful as a tool to provide ideas about what you might want to include in a document.
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Interactive Document Goal |
Features to Use on the Document |
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Present a style appropriate for the executive boardroom. |
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Let users instantly see details in a densely populated document. |
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Present many layers of data in a single document, keeping the layers organized and focused. The layers, or views of the data, must be instantly available to the users. |
Use panels and panel stacks to provide the layers of data in the following ways:
For examples and procedures, see Layering data in interactive documents: Panels and panel stacks. |
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Allow users to change the context of the document. For example, a user can change the following for a specified set of graphs or tables:
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Create documents in Flash that can be used even when disconnected from the network. These documents include full interactivity, visualization, and data content. |
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Use interactive Flash graphs rather than static graphs to provide an engaging way to view data and understand relationships. |
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Unlimited visualization extensibility via Flash uses MicroStrategy's integration with Adobe's FlexBuilder 2 IDE to allow you to:
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For more information on MicroStrategy's Visualization Framework, the FlexBuilder plug-in, and the visualization editor, see the MicroStrategy Developer Library (MSDL) provided with MicroStrategy SDK. In particular, the Understanding the Visualization Framework section is helpful. The path to this section in the MSDL is Web SDK -> Integrating with an External Application -> Visualization Integration. |
