Hello. I'm Michael Goff
and I'm joined today by Aurora Tiffany- Davis.
We're both software developers on the JMP Live team.
For those of you who don't know, JMP Live is a relatively new product from JMP.
It allows you to securely share your JMP insights with your colleagues ,
even if they don't use JMP themselves.
Additionally, JMP Live enables collaboration
with colleagues who do use JMP.
You can view, talk about, build upon, and improve each other's JMP content.
Of course, the first step to collaborating is getting your content up to JMP Live.
So today we're going to focus on that publishing step.
It's really straightforward to do most publishes,
but we're going to explore some of the more advanced options today as well.
Let's go ahead and get started.
All right, let's pull up JMP here.
Go ahead and minimize this.
All right, first up, I'm going to open up a data table here.
This is a data table of college financial data
that I'd like to share with my colleagues.
For those who don't know, many US universities
participate in athletic events and joined together into conferences
for shared negotiating power and scheduling stability.
College athletics is a huge revenue generator
for all these US- based universities.
And lately, that landscape has been changing significantly.
Various media providers like ESPN and Fox Sports
have been signing deals with these conferences
to get their games on TV.
And of course, once you bring money into the equation,
things start to get a little bit wacky.
I have my data set here.
Let's go ahead and create a graph builder report.
I have one saved on the table to save some time.
Here's a graph builder.
Each bar represents one of these conferences.
You can already see that there's some revenue leaders here.
We have the SEC and the Big Ten.
They have the largest slice of the pie.
And we also have some other major players: the PAC-12 , the Big 12, and the ACC.
Our local universities in this area are all members of the ACC.
That would be NC State University, UNC, and Duke.
One other thing to note about this graph: this is only the public universities.
Private institutions don't have to share their data.
So this isn't quite a complete picture, but it's enough to get the point across.
Anyway, I'm going to go ahead and publish this and share this with my peers.
To do that, all I need to do is hit F ile, Publish, and Publish R eports to JMP Live.
Okay. We have our intro screen here.
We select from available reports.
I only have one report open, and that's this graph builder.
And I want to publish the new report.
I'm going to go ahead and hit Next here.
The next step is to select a publish location
and we choose a space to publish to.
I'm going to choose the Discovery Americas 2022 space to begin with.
S paces are a new concept in JMP Live 17.
They're an organizational tool to help you keep your related content together
and shared with the right people.
We're going to take a little bit of a closer look
at the rest of the screen in a couple of minutes.
I'm just going to take the defaults here and move on.
Next up is the Configure Reports page.
This is very similar to the previous version of JMP Live.
We have our title, description, and some advanced options here as well.
I'm just going to take the defaults here and go ahead and publish.
I've successfully published one report.
I've published to the Discovery Americas 2022 space.
I've created a new report, this graph builder here,
and some new data as well, the College Finances table.
We have some options at the bottom.
I can choose to close reports after running,
or I can save the published script to the script window.
Let's go ahead and check that box and close this window.
Now, this is new in JMP 17.
We have the ability to automatically generate scripts
from your interactive publishes.
Let's go over what the script is doing.
First, we have our new JMP Live connection,
and we're connecting to devl ive 17.
That's one of the JMP Live instances.
Next, we create some new JMP Live content
and we pass in some options here.
The first option is passing in a report from JMP,
and to do that, I'm grabbing the window titled the Graph Builder.
Then we have a bunch of default options here:
title, description, and a couple of other advanced options that are set for us
that we're going to talk about in a little bit.
Finally, we choose to Publish.
We pass that content in and we choose the space to publish to.
We chose the Discovery Americas 2022 space.
This here that I have highlighted is a space key.
Think of that as an identifier for the space.
I'm going to go ahead and close this and get this out of the way.
Then let's open up a new data table here.
This is a new data table, C ollege Finances with New C onference Affiliations.
As I was saying earlier, there's been a lot of changes to the landscape lately.
Schools have been changing which conference they're affiliated with,
and it's all about the money.
Let's go ahead and open up that graph builder again.
Here's a graph builder with the new conference alignments
from some of our schools.
You can see here, this is a case of the rich getting richer.
We have the SEC and the Big Ten pulling away from the other conferences.
And it came at a cost to the Pac-12 and the Big 12.
They've lost some of their major financial players to these other conferences.
Let's go ahead and share this one up to JMP Live as well.
Again, we're going to hit File, Publish,
and we're going to Publish Reports to JMP Live.
All right. We can select from available reports again.
I have just my graph builder here and I'm going to publish new again.
Let's go ahead and hit Next.
Next, we still have our Discovery Americas 2022 space,
that I selected previously.
But this time I'm going to do a little bit of organizing.
In JMP Live 17, we've created the concept of hierarchical folders.
We have a folder here inside of our space, Deep Dive: Publishing to J MP Live ,
that's the name of our talk.
We're going to be publishing all of our stuff into this folder.
But I want to keep things a little bit more organized.
So I'm going to create another folder within.
I'm going to call this College Finances.
I've created the College Finances folder inside of our talk folder,
and all of this is contained within the Discovery Americas 2022 space.
I think this all looks good.
I'm going to go ahead and hit Next to move on.
We're back on the Configure Post page.
I'm going to go ahead and name this something else.
Let's call it New Conferences.
I think I'd like a visual aid to help communicate the absurdity
of some of these college landscape changes.
To do that, I'm going to add an image.
I'm going to choose this image here, the Big ten map.
This is just a map of the geographic locations
of the members of the Big Ten conference.
Historically, they've been a sort of Midwestern conference up here,
but recently they've added two new members, UCLA
and the University of Southern California,
both over here on the West Coast in California.
Now this doesn't really make sense as a geographic pairing,
but it's all about the money.
So they've joined up to get some of that TV money.
Let me go ahead and add this, and let's name this something else,
Big Ten Map.
I think I want to reorder this image to be upfront
in front of my report.
To do that, I can just click it and drag it
and pick it up and move it up to the top.
We can drag and drop all of our reports in a single publish
to order them in any way we'd like.
I think this looks great, so I'm going to go ahead and publish.
Okay.
I've successfully published two reports.
I've published to the College Finances folder,
and that's within our Discovery Americas space.
This time I've created two new reports:
our New Conferences graph builder and our Big Ten Map image.
Finally, I've created another new data table,
the New Conference A lignments table here.
Let's go ahead and take a look at this folder in JMP Live.
I'm going to go ahead and click this link here to the College Finances folder.
We've opened up JMP Live now.
We're in our Discovery Americas 2022 space.
We are in our College Finances folder, and there's our two reports.
Now, if you remember the first publish I did,
I just took the defaults on everything
and put that thing in the root of the space here.
So if I JMP over to the root, there's my first report,
along with some pictures of some of our presenters.
I want to move this report into the College Finances folder
to keep things organized.
To do that, I'm going to jump over to the Files view here.
I'm going to select both the report and the data,
and then I'm going to hit the Move posts button over here.
When I do that, I have the root of the space preselected for me
because that's where we're currently located.
But I'd like to move this into the College Finances folder.
Again, we're going from the root of the space here,
and then we're moving a couple of levels down into the College Finances folder.
So when I hit move, the data and report disappear,
and if I click over to the College Finances,
we see they've shown up here.
If I go back to the Reports tab, I have my three reports ready to go.
With that, I'm going to pass things over to Aurora
to take a look at some more publishing scenarios.
Thank you, Michael.
Well, while Michael was looking at College Finances,
I've been reviewing some internal data that we have
on the development of the software for JMP Live version 17.
Every row of this data table contains a brief description
of a code change that one of us made.
I've done some really basic text analysis.
First, I have just a word cloud. "What are developers talking about?"
During the development of the software for JMP Live version 17,
we've been talking an awful lot about data,
and we've also been talking an awful lot about collaboration spaces.
But every developer on the JMP Live team has had a slightly different focus.
For example, Aaron has been talking a lot about downloading projects.
I've been talking a lot about access, in other words, collaboration permissions.
Chris has been talking a lot about user groups and so on.
I think my coworkers might find this interesting,
so I'd like to publish this to JMP Live.
So I'll go to File, Publish, Publish Reports to JMP Live.
And of course, the first choice I have is
among those reports that are currently open,
which ones do I want to publish?
I would like both of them.
I need to pick a space to put that in.
Just like Michael, I'll pick the Discovery A mericas 2022 space
the Deep Dive folder, and I see there's a College Finances folder within,
but that's not really good for my reports,
so I'm going to just create a new one on the fly here, Software Insights.
Now, Michael has shown you how simple publishing can be,
but we do also want to show you some of the more advanced options
that are available in case you need them.
One of these advanced options is publish data.
By default, this is true
because the normal thing to do is to publish not only your reports,
but also the data that those reports rely upon.
The reason that's the normal thing to do is:
first, if you want your reports to still be interactive on JMP Live,
you've got to publish the data,
because the data is what drives that interactivity.
For example, column switchers, local data filters, stuff like that.
In my case, I don't really care about that.
These are just word clouds.
I don't need them to really be interactive.
The second reason why it's a normal thing to do to publish your data
is maybe you want to update that data later on.
When you do that, you want your reports to automatically regenerate
to reflect that latest information.
I don't care about that.
I just want these word clouds to be like a snapshot in time.
The third reason that it's the normal thing to do to publish your data
is maybe you would like your colleagues to be able to download your data
so that they can also run analyses on it,
create some new reports, that kind of thing.
Let's say, I don't care about that either.
So there's really just no reason for me to publish my data.
I'm going to turn this option off for both reports.
Another reason you might choose to turn this option off and not publish your data,
although this isn't applicable in my case,
is maybe your data is just extraordinarily large
and you don't want to wait for it to be uploaded to JMP Live.
On the other hand,
if you're perfectly fine with uploading your data to JMP Live,
you just don't want anybody else to be able to download it.
In a case like that,
you would just come down and uncheck this checkbox that says
"Allow data and scripts to be downloaded".
But in my case, I just don't want to publish the data at all.
So I'm happy with what I've set up here, and I'm going to click Publish.
We can see here that we've published to the Software Insights folder
two new reports, and it doesn't say anything about data.
That's because neither of these new reports use data at all.
They're just static reports.
If we want to confirm that,
we can follow the link by clicking on either one of these reports.
That will open up JMP Live and take us directly to the newly published report.
We'll click on the Details to open the Details pane.
Scroll down to the Data section, and we can confirm.
Yes, zero data sources are used by this report.
Back in JMP,
I'd like to show you the published script that's been generated for us
based on the choices we've made, just like Michael did.
This JSL looks pretty similar to the JSL that Michael showed you a moment ago.
You're creating some new JMP Live content. You're publishing that content.
In my case, I'm publishing directly to a folder.
I think the JSL you saw before was publishing just directly to a space.
And there's one option, of course, that's different,
where I said, "Publish data? No, thanks."
I wonder if Michael has also been thinking about his data and how best to use it.
Yeah, so let's go ahead and look at JMP.
I have a data table here.
This is a data set of the New York Times puzzle game, Spelling Bee .
Lately, I've been really into Wordle ,
but the New York Times Spelling B ee game is a new one for me.
I'm not quite sure what I want to do with this data,
but I know Aurora really enjoys playing these puzzle games,
so I'm going to publish this data set for her to explore.
Now, in prior versions of JMP Live,
to get your data up to JMP Live, you had to publish reports along with it.
But in version 17, we've been prioritizing data a little bit more,
making it more of a first- class citizen.
So I can publish this data by itself.
To do that, I'm going to hit File, Publish, and Publish Data to JMP Live.
Okay, I have my data here.
I have a list of data.
I only have one data table open, the New York Times Bee data,
and I want to publish a new data table here.
Just like Reports, we choose a space and a folder within to publish to.
In this case, I want to create another new folder for this new type of data.
I'm going to call this Spelling Bee.
Okay. I'm going to create that.
We have our space in our folder.
But unlike reports, when you're publishing data,
there's not much more configuration.
So I can just go ahead and immediately publish right now.
I'm going to hit Publish.
I've created the New York Times Bee data table,
and I've published it to the Spelling Bee folder within our space.
Let's see what Aurora is going to do with this data.
I've heard a rumor that Michael has published some data
about the Spelling Bee puzzle.
I like to play that. So I want to take a look at this data.
I'm browsing around on my organization's JMP Live site, and I'm on the home page.
But the home page really shows you just reports,
because reports is what most people want to see most of the time.
I just want to find some data.
So I'm going to use the search field up here in this blue navigation bar,
and I'm going to hope that Michael has named his data table well.
I'm going to see if I can search for it just by typing in the word bee .
Great. There it is, "nytbee".
But maybe, what if Michael was having a bad day,
and he wasn't thinking about how to make his data easily findable
and he called it just cool data or something.
Well, in that case, I could just search for Michael.
Let me search for his last name here, Goff.
There he is. Michael Goff.
I can open his profile page.
This is going to show me all of the reports that Michael has published,
at least those reports that I'm allowed to see.
Under this Reports tab, there's a Data tab.
This shows me all of the data
that Michael has published that I'm allowed to see.
And there it is, "nytbee".
However you find it, once you find it, click on it.
That will open the data post.
Okay, I can see that there is some data called "nytbee"
and it was published a minute ago by Michael Goff
and it's not used by any reports yet.
But is it actually useful data for me?
I don't really know.
It's possible that this data is just humongous
and so maybe I don't want to take the time to download it
just to find out that that's not what I want after all.
So I'm going to use this View D ata feature to get a sneak peek
at the shape of the data and see what's in there,
see if it's useful to me.
It looks like it's got a bunch of information for every day
that a new puzzle came out.
Some of this looks like not super helpful, so let me get that out of the way.
All right. Oh, cool.
It looks like for every date, we have the letters that were used in the puzzle,
stuff like the maximum score you could achieve,
the number of pan grams.
The pan gram is the number of solutions that there are
that use all of the letters in the puzzle.
These are few and far between.
It's what makes it really exciting when you get one.
This is definitely data I want to analyze.
So I need to get it from JMP Live down to my local machine.
I can do that by going to the menu and clicking Download data table,
or because I already have a connection set up between JMP on my machine
and my organization's JMP Live site, I can use a shortcut called Open in JMP.
What this is going to do,
it's just going to download it in the background for me
and then open it for me in JMP.
There we go.
This has opened this for me in JMP on my machine.
To save some time in the demo, we have some analyses ready to run.
We've got Number of Pan grams versus Date.
There are very few pan grams, typically.
Distribution of Letters, not too surprising.
Q is not a very common letter to see in this puzzle,
but A is a very common letter.
And some difficulty metrics.
So what's the maximum score you can achieve
and what is the maximum number of words you can make
based on what letter you're required to use.
So if you're required to use Z in all of your solutions,
you're pretty darn constrained on the maximum score that you can achieve.
I like to get these reports up to JMP Live.
So I'll go to File, P ublish, Publish Reports to JMP Live.
As always, I need to choose among those reports that are currently open
which ones do I want to publish?
I want all of them.
Then, of course, I need to choose where to put it.
Spelling Bee, obviously.
Now, remember when I told you earlier that the normal thing to do
is to publish not only your reports,
but also the data that those reports rely upon?
But in this case, I don't want to publish the data up to JMP Live
because I know it's already on JMP Live.
I mean, I just downloaded it.
But I also don't want to say, "Don't use data,"
because then my reports would be non-interactive.
They'll just be static.
What I want to do is I want to say, "Please publish these reports,
but make them use the data that's already up there."
To do that, I click on Data Options
and I switch from Publish new data to Select existing data.
Of course, the next question is, "What data do you want me to use?"
I click in there and it makes a recommendation to me.
That's because the software recognizes that I just downloaded this from JMP Live
and then made some reports with it.
This is probably the JMP Live data that I want to use.
In my case, that's a great recommendation.
That's exactly the data I want to use.
But if I didn't get a good recommendation,
I can always just start typing in this field,
and it will show me data tables up on JMP Live that match what I've typed in.
Once I find the data on JMP Live that I want these new reports to use,
I just save that option and click Publish.
We can see here that we've published to the Spelling Bee folder
three new reports and zero new data tables.
Hopefully, that's because these new reports
are successfully using Michael's existing data.
If we need to confirm that we can just click on any one of these reports,
it'll open that newly published report in JMP Live.
Go to the Details pane, scroll down to the Data section,
and sure enough, one data source is used by this report,
and it's the "nytbee" table that was published by Michael six minutes ago.
I'm going to follow this link,
open the data post.
Here, we can just double- check that, yes, it's not only this report,
but it's all three of the reports I just published
are now successfully associated with Michael's data.
Let's go back to JMP
and again show you the published script that was generated
from the choices that we made.
These are probably looking very familiar to you by now.
In this case, we have three new pieces of JMP Live content
for these three reports.
We are publishing them to a folder.
Here we're exercising a new option, Use E xisting Data
that's already on JMP Live.
Since I am using Michael's data,
I'd like to let him know how useful it was to me.
Back on JMP Live, I'm going to click on Comments here.
Just let Michael know that I found this to be really interesting stuff,
"I have done some basic analysis. Let me know what you think."
Let's see what Michael thinks of that.
Okay. I'm back on JMP Live here, and I just got a notification.
It looks like Aurora has left a comment on my data.
If I go over here and check out her comment,
looks like she thinks it's really interesting.
And look at that.
She's created some reports to go with that data.
Let's jump over to the folder and take a look at everything together.
I have the Spelling Bee folder here, Aurora's three reports.
If I go to the Files tab, I can see my data table here as well.
Let's go ahead and open this entire folder up in JMP and take a look at it.
Just like Aurora did with her data table,
I can open a folder in JMP using the Open in JMP button.
I'm going to get a couple of warnings here.
This is saying that it's going to open JMP.
That's okay.
I'm also going to get a warning that this is downloaded from the Internet.
This is a Mac thing.
Let's go ahead and open.
Here I have a JMP project.
If you want to learn a little bit more about how JMP projects work with JMP Live,
you can tune into Aurora's other talk with Erin Anderson about JMP projects.
For now, I'm just going to go over things really quickly here.
First, we have a journal.
This is a manifest of the files that were included with this project.
Of course, that's going to be the reports that Aurora just talked about,
our difficulty metrics, our pan grams, and the distribution of letters.
I'm looking at this distribution of letters,
and I think there's an enhancement we can make to this report.
I think it'd be interesting to look at
just the vowels and just the consonants together
to get a better comparison of the two.
To do that, we need to add a new column to the table
to identify which is a vowel and which is a consonant.
Let's go ahead and open the New York Times table here.
I can hit the red triangle menu and add a column.
Let's go ahead and name this Vowel.
Okay, that looks good.
And let's create a formula here.
I already know what I'm going to type here.
I'm going to go ahead and type this out, and then we can talk about it.
If contains a, e, i, o, u…
Okay. What this is saying is if
the letter is contained within the set of vowels here, that means it's a vowel.
Otherwise, it's just a consonant.
Hit OK here.
And I've created my new column.
This looks great.
Let's JMP back over to the distribution of letters
and add a local data filter.
So I can hit the red triangle menu, hit Local Data Filter.
Here's a list of columns to choose from.
I'm going to choose my Vowel column,
and I'm going to go ahead and display this as a list.
So now if I select consonant, I can see only the consonants.
If I select vowels, I see the vowels.
This looks great.
I want to go ahead and update this report on JMP Live with this new enhancement.
To do that, I can do a replace.
To replace this report, I go to File, Publish, and Publish Reports to JMP Live.
This time, I have a list of three different reports.
These are the reports that Aurora created.
They're coming out of the project.
Since I had the distribution focused, it's already preselected for me.
And instead of publish new,
I want to replace an existing post this time.
Let's hit Next.
When you replace a report,
you need to find the report that you'd like to replace.
I hit this drop- down here and I see that distribution of letters already.
I'm going to go ahead and select that.
This is Aurora's distribution here.
I'm going to go ahead and modify the title and save with Local Data Filter.
I think everything else looks good here, so I'm going to go ahead and move on.
Next up is the Match Data step.
You have to match the data that's on the existing report in JMP Live
to the data you have locally.
In this case, there's only one table, the New York Times Bee table.
I have three options here.
I can choose to publish new data,
that would create a new copy of the data table
for use only with this report.
I can choose to use the existing data on JMP Live,
or I can choose to update that data.
In this case, I want to update the data since we added a new column.
When I choose update here,
I get a warning that updating will affect two other reports.
That would be the other reports that Aurora created that's using this data.
In this case, I know that's okay because I'm just adding a new column here.
That won't affect the other visualizations.
Everything else here looks great, so I'm going to go ahead and hit Replace.
I've successfully replaced the Distribution of Letters
with Distribution of Letters with Local Data Filter,
and we've also updated the data here.
I'm going to go ahead and hit the script button here
and close the window,
and let's take a look at this script.
Just like before we're creating that connection, the content,
grabbing that window, and all these options.
The difference is here, instead of publish, I'm going to replace.
To replace, I pass in that content,
I have to specify which report I'd like to replace.
I did that interactively, but this is the ID of that report I selected.
Finally, I have an option of what to do with that data.
I'm choosing to update that existing data.
So I'm identifying that data by its ID,
and I'm updating it with the New York Times Bee table data here.
Let's see what Aurora thinks of my new update to her report.
Thank you, Michael.
All right. I've seen that Michael has made an improvement to this report.
He's put a local data filter on here.
It looks like if I select both vowels and consonants,
then basically this is the same report that I published initially.
So I haven't really lost anything. I've only gained in interactivity.
I think this is going to be great for me, for Michael,
and for anybody else who might look at this report,
including people who don't even use JMP.
They can still use this interactive feature.
So I think that's fantastic.
I love this improvement,
and I'm going to comment and let Michael know that I love it.
"Love the new data filter. Thanks."
But why is it that Michael was allowed to improve and replace my report?
Should I be worried about that?
No, it's simply because I published this report to a collaboration space,
Discovery Americas 2022, where Michael i s a key contributor.
To show you more about what I mean,
I'm going to switch over to a browser where I'm logged in as an administrator.
As an administrator, I have access to this Permissions tab in the space.
In this Permissions tab,
I can turn on and off collaboration permissions
for different individual users and for groups of users.
So y ou can see here that the administrator
has given Michael replace permission on this space.
When your JMP Live admin creates a new space for your organization,
they're the only ones with access to that space,
then they have to turn on collaboration permissions for other people.
So if one of your co workers has collaboration permission on a space,
it's because an admin trusts them to use that responsibility wisely.
While I've been going on about collaboration,
I think that Michael has been looking at all of the pieces of JSL
that we've been generating throughout this demonstration.
Let's see where he's at with that.
Yes, that's right.
Let's go ahead and look at JMP here.
Let me get some stuff out of the way,
and open up this script that I've been working on.
I've taken all of our scripts that were generated by our interactive publishes,
and I've put them together into this one script
to recreate our entire demo in one go.
Let's go ahead and take a look at what this script is doing.
First, we're creating a new JMP Live connection here
to our instance that we're publishing to,
followed by saving off some variables to use later.
I have the space key here for the Discovery Americas 2022 space.
We're going to use that for our publishes,
and I have a path to all of our data here as well.
First, I need to recreate that folder structure that we created interactively.
To do that, I'm going to use some of the JMP Live JSL here,
Create Folder.
The first folder I'm going to create is that container folder,
our Deep Dive: Publish,
but this is our script version.
I'm publishing this to our space using the space key.
When I create that folder,
I'm going to go ahead and save off that ID of the folder to use later.
Next, I'm going to create the three subfolders:
the College Finances folder, the Software Insights folder,
and the Spelling Bee Puzzle folder.
I'm going to use the folder ID to create them.
I pass the folder ID in here,
and that makes this folder here a child of the parent folder there.
So I've got those folders created,
and of course, I'm also saving off these IDs as well
to use later in my Publish operations.
Next, I'm opening up data tables and running reports.
I've opened up the College Finances folder here.
I'm running that table script to create a report.
And here's that first section of interactive Publish code here.
I'm creating that new JMP Live content like before,
taking all the defaults and calling Publish.
The only edit I've made here is I've substituted out the ID
with the ID of the folder I just created above.
Next, I'm going to create the new conference alignments table,
run that script, and then create that content.
Do the same thing I did before to that college folder ID.
Next, I'm going to get Aurora's word cloud data table and reports.
I'm opening that table, writing the scripts,
and just like Aurora showed, we're creating that new JMP Live content,
and we're not publishing the data here so publish data is zero.
A gain, we're publishing,
and I'm passing in the word cloud folder I D here.
We're putting that in our new folder we created.
Then I'm going to create that New York Times Bee data table
and three more reports, get those opened up.
Then we're going to create that new JMP Live content.
Finally, publish all that up to JMP Live to the bee folder ID.
If you remember, I did some edits to that report after we published it.
I'm going to save off the published results here.
This is just a list of the created reports and data.
I want to iterate through this list of posts
to identify the report called Distribution of Letters and also the data.
Then I'm going to save off these IDs.
I have my report ID and my data ID.
I'm saving these off so I can replace that post in a second.
Next, we're going to create that new Vowel column that I created
and also add that Local Data Filter.
Then finally, we're doing that last Replace operation.
We're creating that new JMP Live content, and then we're calling Replace.
We're passing the content into Replace.
We're identifying the report we'd like to replace with that report ID.
Then we're identifying the data we want to update with that data ID here.
Then finally, we're closing everything to clean it up
and opening up the web browser to the folder here.
Let's go ahead and run this script.
We're getting started here.
Michael, I noticed that a semicolon is selected with your cursor.
-Is it possible that it's running? -Yes.
Thank you.
There we go.
Now we have our report opening, our second report,
Aurora's word clouds,
the New York Times Bee table, and the script here,
and there's our folder.
We created that folder on JMP Live.
Here's the script version, our Spelling Bee Puzzle report,
Software Development Insights with the word clouds,
and our C ollege Finance reports.
With that, that about wraps up our demo for publishing to JMP Live in JMP 17.
Be sure to check out our other talks on JMP Live.
We have a general updates talk, a talk on using projects with JMP Live
and a talk on our biggest feature in JMP Live 17, refreshable data.
Thanks again for joining us today.