Book Image

Data Cleaning with Power BI

By : Gus Frazer
Book Image

Data Cleaning with Power BI

By: Gus Frazer

Overview of this book

Microsoft Power BI offers a range of powerful data cleaning and preparation options through tools such as DAX, Power Query, and the M language. However, despite its user-friendly interface, mastering it can be challenging. Whether you're a seasoned analyst or a novice exploring the potential of Power BI, this comprehensive guide equips you with techniques to transform raw data into a reliable foundation for insightful analysis and visualization. This book serves as a comprehensive guide to data cleaning, starting with data quality, common data challenges, and best practices for handling data. You’ll learn how to import and clean data with Query Editor and transform data using the M query language. As you advance, you’ll explore Power BI’s data modeling capabilities for efficient cleaning and establishing relationships. Later chapters cover best practices for using Power Automate for data cleaning and task automation. Finally, you’ll discover how OpenAI and ChatGPT can make data cleaning in Power BI easier. By the end of the book, you will have a comprehensive understanding of data cleaning concepts, techniques, and how to use Power BI and its tools for effective data preparation.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Part 1 – Introduction and Fundamentals
6
Part 2 – Data Import and Query Editor
11
Part 3 – Advanced Data Cleaning and Optimizations
16
Part 4 – Paginated Reports, Automations, and OpenAI

Summary

In this chapter, you were introduced to Power BI Report Builder to prepare your data for building paginated reports.

Your journey unfolded with insights into the significance of paginated reports, connecting to data sources, utilizing Query Designer, parameters, and filters. Navigating the user interface, you discovered the functionalities of Report Data, Parameters, Properties, and row groups and column groups as well as how to create parameterized fields to refine your dataset queries. Finally, using an example, you began building your report to aggregate and group data by the row groups you created when building the tablix.

This chapter served as just an introduction to the world of Power BI Report Builder and how you can prepare and report on data using paginated reports. I hope a key takeaway from this chapter is that, even if the data you’re working with is clean in your Power BI model or upstream databases, you will still need to do some level of data preparation...