Forum Discussion
I've got the same issue; my horizontal bar chart has 2 series determined by a report formula, 5 rows match 1 series and the 6th row is the "leader".
I get 2 colors, blue or black depending on the alpha-sorting of the value I put into the report formula.
It looks like highchart is blue for series 0 and black for series 1 and there's nothing i can do about that.
Sure would be nice to be able to give my chart a punchier color for the report leader!
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Peter Surplice
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- MikeTamoush2 years agoQrew Commander
Can you not change them in the normal way, by clicking in the custom report settings on the color boxes?
If not, this is probably due to a very annoying 'feature' in Quickbase. On charts, colors are automatically chosen for you. You can go in and reassign the color (typically, maybe not for formulas?), but you can only choose colors for those options that currently exist. And, if that option goes away and comes back, the color will automatically be reassigned.
For example, you have 3 selections, On Time, In Process, Late. Lets say you have 5 On Time items, and set the color. But over time those 5 On Time things move to in process, and suddenly you have 0 On Time things. That bar disappears from the chart, and when it returns, it changes the color you selected. I haven't tested with a formula, but I wonder if QB doesn't allow changing the color due to this.
There is a feedback a number of us have voted up, to let us set default colors.
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Mike Tamoush
------------------------------- PeterSurplice2 years agoQrew Member
In this instance, the legend doesn't contain configurable colors for each series, because our series is defined by a report formula:
In this case, we have a formula that lets use use the series colors to highlight records that meet certain conditions, like conditional formatting in Excel:
If, on the other hand, we use a field for our series we would get the normal legend configuration where we can set the colors for each series.
We could, alternatively, put our report formula in a formula field on the table; but for tables where you have a lot of reports with conditional formatting you're going to end up with a lot of formula fields with very specific naming to ensure you don't get things mixed up between reports: Avoiding that problem feels like the exact reason why we have report formulas.
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Peter Surplice
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