With the “font”-size they can be adapted to smaller or bigger.The & #11027 (without space): ⬓ especially made for the followers of the GR’s. and mathematic characters, figures, etc.etc. They cover also all non-Latin alphabets, like Greek, Braille, Chinese, Cyrillian etc. In case only a hover-state is needed (for a dropdown menu or something like that), css is sufficient for the Next problem please? - Can I Use transform - not for IE8 and before … (:įor who is wondering if there are more of these special characters: yes! There are lists with ten thousands of it ( see here or here).So indeed javascript will be the most efficient way, I think. In that case the down or up will be triggered by an onclick (triggering also the sorting), and is waiting for another click to toggle upside down again. I’ve just a small presumption that the up/down’s are for sorting of a list (as the title of this topic says).
No doubt it can be optimised if and only if there is sufficient viewers to warrant changes This has been tried, tested and works fine.
TRIANGLE ICON WITH UP AND DOWN ARROWS CODE
Plus, I need my PHP code to be able to easily toggle between an Up Triangle and Down Triangle, and I’m not sure how I’d do that with your CSS suggestion…Ī
Your suggestion sure seems like a lot of code and effort for just a triangle. TrueCue are Tableau’s longest standing European Partner.I already saw that, BUT I asked this question in the HTML Forum because I thought there might be an HTML symbol I could use - like the ampersand…
TRIANGLE ICON WITH UP AND DOWN ARROWS PLUS
You can also replace the up/down arrows with different symbols, or even whole words like “Profit” and “Loss”.įor currency, simply add a currency symbol after the plus and minus e.g. “+£”#,# ▲ ”-£”#,# ▼. You can keep adding zeros for more decimal places. Just copy & paste the text into the custom format box. You simply need to right-click a field, choose Default Properties > Number Format > Custom and enter your custom format into the window.īelow is a table I’ve created for easy reference. This tip is a good one! You can very easily format KPIs in Tableau, to look like anyone of the examples below, without creating any calculated fields.