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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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Free Chapter
1
Part I: Introduction
6
Part II: Business cases
15
Other Books You May Enjoy
16
Index

Where DAX fits in, and where to find it

In an analytics solution based on the Microsoft platform, DAX is used in the Analyze layer. DAX lives inside analytical models as the formula language to define calculations and other logic. In fact, models and DAX are really two sides of the same coin: the design of the model impacts the complexity of the DAX code, and your skills in DAX determine your model designs (we will elaborate on the core concepts of data models in Chapter 1.2, Model Design).

The power of DAX is in its strong data aggregation capabilities. The DAX language contains many functions and constructs for defining a variety of aggregations to generate results that lead to the insights needed. In the past, many types of aggregations could not be created directly but had to be implemented through specifically preparing data. For instance, computing a year-to-date sales total can be done in DAX with a single function, while in Excel or traditional reporting tools, separate...

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