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Salesforce Analytics-Admn-201 Exam - Topic 4 Question 7 Discussion

Actual exam question for Salesforce's Analytics-Admn-201 exam
Question #: 7
Topic #: 4
[All Analytics-Admn-201 Questions]

You use Tableau Desktop 10.5 and plan to publish a visualization to a Tableau Server that runs version 2020.1. You are assigned the Creator site role, and Publisher permissions for a project. What statement correctly describes what happens when you attempt to publish the visualization?

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Suggested Answer: C

Tableau Desktop and Tableau Server have versioning considerations when publishing content, particularly regarding compatibility between older Desktop versions (e.g., 10.5) and newer Server versions (e.g., 2020.1). Let's break this down step-by-step:

Publishing Process: With a Creator site role and Publisher permissions, you have the rights to publish workbooks to the specified project. Tableau Server accepts workbooks from older Desktop versions (e.g., 10.5) and upgrades them to the current Server version (2020.1) during publishing. This process is seamless for the workbook itself, but extracts require special handling.

Extract Handling: If the workbook contains embedded .tde extracts (stored within the .twb or .twbx file), Tableau Server 2020.1 converts these to .hyper format upon publishing. This conversion is necessary because .hyper replaced .tde as the default extract engine starting in Tableau 10.5 and beyond, offering better performance and scalability. During this process, Tableau Desktop or Server displays a warning to inform the user of the upgrade, as it's a one-way conversion (you can't revert to .tde on the Server).

Now, let's evaluate the options:

Option A (You will successfully publish without any errors or warnings): Incorrect. While the publishing succeeds, a warning about the .tde to .hyper conversion appears if the workbook contains embedded extracts. Without extracts, no warning occurs, but the question's context implies extracts are likely involved (common in visualizations).

Option B (Error message: unable to publish to a newer version): Incorrect. Tableau supports publishing from older Desktop versions to newer Server versions. There's no outright error blocking this; compatibility is maintained.

Option C (Warning: embedded .tde extracts will be upgraded to .hyper): Correct. This is the precise warning displayed when a workbook with .tde extracts is published to a Server version that uses .hyper. It ensures the user is aware of the format change, which might affect extract refresh schedules or performance expectations.

Option D (Warning: workbook will be upgraded to a new version): Partially correct but less specific. The workbook is upgraded to 2020.1 compatibility, but the warning focuses on the extract format change (.tde to .hyper), not the workbook version generically. Option C is more accurate.

Why This Matters: The .tde to .hyper shift improves query performance and supports larger datasets, but users need to know about it for planning (e.g., extract refresh schedules might need adjustment). The warning ensures transparency.


Contribute your Thoughts:

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Asuncion
3 days ago
Totally agree, B makes sense!
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Eve
8 days ago
C) makes the most sense. Who wants to deal with extract upgrades?
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Eun
13 days ago
I hope the answer isn't A). That would be too easy!
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Ronna
18 days ago
Hmm, I bet the answer is C). Tableau is always nagging about extract formats.
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Harrison
24 days ago
B) is probably the right answer. You can't publish to a newer server version.
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Isidra
29 days ago
D) seems like the most likely option. Tableau usually warns you about version upgrades.
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Noah
1 month ago
C) is the correct answer. Tableau will warn you about the extract format upgrade.
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Cornell
1 month ago
I recall reading that older workbooks might get upgraded when published to a newer server version. So, option C sounds familiar, but I’m not completely confident.
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Dominic
1 month ago
I’m a bit confused. I thought that as long as you have the right permissions, you could publish without issues. Maybe option A is possible?
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Anglea
2 months ago
I think I remember something about version compatibility issues. I’m leaning towards option B, but I’m not entirely sure.
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Marcos
2 months ago
I'm pretty confident that the correct answer is B. The question specifically mentions that the Tableau Server is running a newer version, so I'm guessing that publishing to an older version would result in an error.
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Carma
2 months ago
Option D sounds like the safest bet to me. If the Tableau Server is running a newer version, it's likely that the workbook will need to be upgraded to work with that version. Better to be prepared for that than to be surprised by an error.
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Laticia
2 months ago
I think it's B. Can't publish older version to newer server.
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Evelynn
3 months ago
B is correct. You can't publish to a newer version.
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Cassandra
3 months ago
I practiced a similar question where the version difference caused a warning. I feel like option D might be the right choice here.
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Truman
3 months ago
Hmm, I'm torn between B and C. I know that .tde extracts are an older format, so the warning about them being upgraded to .hyper makes sense. But the error message in option B also seems plausible. I'll have to think this through a bit more.
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Maxima
3 months ago
Hmm, this is a tricky one. I'm not entirely sure what the difference is between .tde and .hyper extracts, so I'm a bit confused about that part of the question. I'll have to think it through carefully.
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Nathan
3 months ago
I think I'll go with option C. The question mentions that the Tableau Server is running a newer version, so I'm guessing there might be some compatibility issues with the older .tde extracts.
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Lindsey
2 months ago
I agree with option C. The upgrade to .hyper makes sense.
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