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Extreme DAX

Extreme DAX

By : Michiel Rozema, Henk Vlootman
4.9 (44)
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Extreme DAX

Extreme DAX

4.9 (44)
By: Michiel Rozema, Henk Vlootman

Overview of this book

This book helps business analysts generate powerful and sophisticated analyses from their data using DAX and get the most out of Microsoft Business Intelligence tools. Extreme DAX will first teach you the principles of business intelligence, good model design, and how DAX fits into it all. Then, you’ll launch into detailed examples of DAX in real-world business scenarios such as inventory calculations, forecasting, intercompany business, and data security. At each step, senior DAX experts will walk you through the subtleties involved in working with Power BI models and common mistakes to look out for as you build advanced data aggregations. You’ll deepen your understanding of DAX functions, filters, and measures, and how and when they can be used to derive effective insights. You’ll also be provided with PBIX files for each chapter, so that you can follow along and explore in your own time.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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1
Part I: Introduction
6
Part II: Business cases
15
Other Books You May Enjoy
16
Index

Calculating FTEs needed

Now that we have a view of the financial flows over time, let us turn toward analyzing the resources needed to staff the projects. As with the sales calculations, we will do this on a per-month basis, as the fFTE table provides this information by month.

The result we are aiming for should make it possible to create output like in the figure below:

Figure 2.8.6: FTEs needed by location, project, role, and month

For a few projects, you see the number of FTEs per role that are needed in each specific month. The calculation to achieve this is quite complicated, though the formula itself is not that long. We will go through it step by step.

Let us first start with two basic aggregations:

TotalFTE = SUM(fFTE[FTE])
TotalNumber = SUM(fProjectSales[Number])

Remember that the Number column denotes the size of a project relative to its type: for a project with Number = 3, we expect three times the FTEs associated with its project type...

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