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Below is a sample dashboard I created for illustrative pruposes. You'll see that the top two rails have been added more for design and visual purposes, highlighted in yellow on the far left side. The dark gray in the top rail might include a logo, a refresh date. The lighter gray rail would include slicers.
Nonetheless, once published, is there a capability in PBI that allows the non-interactive aesthetics to be committed to the "background", and not accidentally "selected" by an unknowing user?
Thanks
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi,
You can "protect" objects/visuals on a page by placing them behind a transparent box shape. In effect you create a layer on top of the visuals which is just a shape. The way to do this is to layout the objects you want "protected", insert a rectangular shape (no borders, set "Fill" and "Line" to transparent) to cover the objects and then, with the rectangular shape selected, go to the Format tab on the main menu and choose "bring to front" (in the "bring foward" dropdown). Just to make sure, you can select the objects you want to "protect" and use the same Format tab to send them "send to back" under the "send backward" dropdown.
It's also more elegant to disable the "Visual Header" in the object formatting pane for at least the rectangle, if not all the affected objects.
Bit laborious but it works.
Hope it helps!
Proud to be a Super User!
Paul on Linkedin.
Hi,
You can "protect" objects/visuals on a page by placing them behind a transparent box shape. In effect you create a layer on top of the visuals which is just a shape. The way to do this is to layout the objects you want "protected", insert a rectangular shape (no borders, set "Fill" and "Line" to transparent) to cover the objects and then, with the rectangular shape selected, go to the Format tab on the main menu and choose "bring to front" (in the "bring foward" dropdown). Just to make sure, you can select the objects you want to "protect" and use the same Format tab to send them "send to back" under the "send backward" dropdown.
It's also more elegant to disable the "Visual Header" in the object formatting pane for at least the rectangle, if not all the affected objects.
Bit laborious but it works.
Hope it helps!
Proud to be a Super User!
Paul on Linkedin.
Hi @Anonymous ,
If I understand your question correctly, you mean that you don't want the other users to edit when you publish the report in Power BI Service?
If that is the case, you could publish your report in the classic app workspace with the view permission or share the report with the others so that they cannot edit it.
If you need any other help, feel free to ask.
Best Regards,
Cherry
@v-piga-msft I don't believe that is the question I am asking.
Simply put, the two colored rails at the top of my visual - I'd like to know if/how I can restrict a user from accidentally selecting them, and make them part of the design/background.
I think you want to turn off the "Visual Header"
Hi @Anonymous ,
If I understand your requirement correctly that you don't want others to edit the two colored rails at the top of your visual in Power BI Service?
If it is, how do you create the two colored rails at the top of the visual?
Best Regards,
Cherry
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