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Multi-Page Dashboards

Updated on Apr 30, 2026

Overview

Multi-page dashboards let you organize related visualizations across multiple pages (tabs) within a single dashboard. Each page has its own widget layout while sharing a common header, filters, and appearance settings.

Creating Pages

  1. Enter Edit mode
  2. Click "Add page" in the tab bar or sidebar
  3. Enter a page title and press Enter
  4. The new page opens in edit mode with an empty canvas

Managing Pages

Pages support the following operations:

  • Switch pages — Click a tab or sidebar item
  • Rename — Double-click the tab name, or right-click → "Rename"
  • Delete — Right-click → "Delete" (with confirmation)
  • Reorder — Drag and drop tabs or sidebar items

Page Display Modes

Choose how pages are presented to viewers:

  • Tabs — Horizontal tab bar between the header and content
  • Sidebar — Collapsible vertical sidebar on the left
  • Hidden — Pages exist but navigation is not shown (single-page view)

Tab visual styles include Underline (minimal), Pill (rounded background), and Boxed (card-like border). The accent color for active tabs is customizable.

Shared Header Strip

When enabled, a persistent header appears above all pages:

  • Dashboard title — Editable in edit mode
  • Logo — From whitelabel settings (beside or above the title)
  • Watermark — Secondary logo, right-aligned
  • Background color — Configurable; text colors auto-adjust for contrast

Page Inheritance

Parent dashboard settings can be inherited by child pages:

  • Header — Shared header strip appears on all pages
  • Filters — Parent filter values apply to child pages
  • Date Range — Parent date range applies to child pages
  • Appearance — Colors, theme, branding inherited

Inheritance is configured at the dashboard level and can be overridden per page. Each page can opt out of specific inherited settings while keeping others.

Filter Behavior Across Pages

Filters are display-only when inherited — the child page shows the parent's filter values but maintains its own filter configuration. Switching between pages does not leak filter state. Each page can have its own widget-level filters independent of the parent.

Use Cases

  • Executive vs Detailed views — Summary KPIs on page 1, detailed tables on page 2
  • Multi-channel reports — One page per advertising platform
  • Campaign drill-down — Overview page with drill-down to specific campaigns
  • Regional reports — One page per region sharing the same date range and branding

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