The tutor who answers this must have the Tableau software Downloaded. And make sure you have access to the "My Tableau Repository". Open new color palettes into Tableau with whichever graph and take a

"So if you go to Blackboard for Week Six practice you'll see that one of the files attached to the practical is a file called preferences dot TPS. If you've downloaded that file from Blackboard, it'll probably be saved to your downloads folder. What I then want you to do is navigate to your documents folder, and you'll see that there's a folder that's called my tableau repository. If you click on that, you will already see that you have a file called preferences dot TPS. What I want you to do that because I want you to rename this file so that it's preferences dot TPS dot back like this. It's always good practice to backup previously, your preferences while before you make any changes to okay so now once we have that, okay, the file that you've downloaded and I want you to then drag that file into my tableau repository. So that now you should have a preference is not TPS back and a preferences not TPS. And not when you do that. And when you open up Tableau and if you check your color palettes by going to colors, and colors, select a color palette, you should see that a number of palettes have been added below the default Tableau palettes and what I've added for you are the color broad palettes, the Viridis palette the Okabe Ito palette in the IBM colorblind palette. This will now give you some better options in choosing palettes that are accessible. I did want to however also show you how you can add your own palette. So if we go back to our preferences dot TPS back a file and be asked whether it's Windows or Mac use a notepad or something like that. To open it, it's going to want to open in Tableau by default. You don't want to do that. So either use TextEdit if you're on a Mac or notepad if you're on a PC and open it and you'll notice that in this original file, the one that we backed up, it's pretty much blank. And now it we open up our new file and do the same thina, use either notepad text edit. We'll see that there's a lot more information there. What I want to show you is this let's consider this first one here under preference. This right here is one color palette. It tells Tableau what you want to display the name as it tells Tableau whether it's a regular or order diverging or ordered sequential palette. And then it lists the colors of your palette in terms of their hex values. So if you're feeling creative, or if you want my help, I'm happy to do this. You can add any point you wish to Tableau by simply copying this part here and then replacing it with the information that you want and I should note you don't need you don't need 20 colors. As you'll see some of these are very short. This is a three color qualitative palette from code. But I did want to show you that because you can add your own custom palettes that you might you know, for instance, let's say if your company has a particular brand palette, you can add that into Tableau by following along here and that should get you set up with your new palettes. When you go into Tableau make sure that you see in the Edit palettes toward the bottom because that is one of the questions for practical six."