Table chart
The table chart is an excellent way to display your results in a simple list format. It looks a bit different from the table in the Data tab — here you can:
Add or remove columns just for the chart
Rename column headers (default is the name from the Data tab)
Decide if a column should be sortable (users can click on the header)
You can also change the chart title and description in the Chart tab. By default, the chart uses the title of your insight, but you can update it anytime to describe what the table shows.
How to use the table chart
Go to the Chart tab.
Select Table from the Chart type dropdown menu.
You'll now see your data in a table layout.
This chart type is perfect when you want to display larger amounts of data, such as:
Customers per country
List of departments with counts
Cities and their average indices
Adding and customizing columns
In the Metrics section on the right:
Click "Add metric" to include more columns from your data.
You can remove columns using the small ✕ next to them.
You can rename any column by clicking the three dots
•••
and editing the "Title" field.You can change which data column is displayed — for example, switch to a different field.
Sorting columns
You can make any column sortable by toggling the "Sortable" switch in the •••
menu.
When enabled, users can click on the column header in the chart to sort the table ascending/descending.
Chart title and description
In the upper area of the chart settings, you can change:
Title – what the chart is called
Description – optional note explaining what the chart shows
By default, the chart title matches your insight name, but you can change it here without affecting other areas.
How it differs from the data table
The table chart looks like a table but isn't the same as the one in the Data tab:
You have more control over which columns are displayed.
You can rename them just for presentation.
The chart is for viewing, not editing or querying.
You can sort columns directly in the display.
Use this when you want to share or present data in a simple way — without switching to a full graphical chart.
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