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Microsoft Power BI For Dummies J Hyman

Microsoft Power BI For Dummies By J Hyman

Microsoft Power BI For Dummies by J Hyman


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Microsoft Power BI For Dummies Summary

Microsoft Power BI For Dummies by J Hyman

Reveal the insights behind your company's data with Microsoft Power BI

Microsoft Power BI allows intuitive access to data that can power intelligent business decisions and insightful strategies. The question is, do you have the Power BI skills to make your organization's numbers spill their secrets?

In Microsoft Power BI For Dummies, expert lecturer, consultant, and author Jack Hyman delivers a start-to-finish guide to applying the Power BI platform to your own firm's data. You'll discover how to start exploring your data sources, build data models, visualize your results, and create compelling reports that motivate decisive action.

  • Tackle the basics of Microsoft Power BI and, when you're done with that, move on to advanced functions like accessing data with DAX and app integrations
  • Guide your organization's direction and decisions with rock-solid conclusions based on real-world data
  • Impress your bosses and confidently lead your direct reports with exciting insights drawn from Power BI's useful visualization tools

It's one thing for your company to have data at its disposal. It's another thing entirely to know what to do with it. Microsoft Power BI For Dummies is the straightforward blueprint you need to apply one of the most powerful business intelligence tools on the market to your firm's existing data.

About J Hyman

Jack Hyman is Chief Executive Officer of HyerTek, an IT consulting firm specializing in Microsoft's business platforms. He is Associate Professor in the Computer Information Sciences department at the University of the Cumberlands. He has written several books in the For Dummies series, as well as certification study guides for the Microsoft Azure technology.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 2

Foolish Assumptions 3

Icons Used in This Book 4

Beyond the Book 5

Part 1: Put Your BI Thinking Caps On 7

Chapter 1: A Crash Course in Data Analytics Terms: Power BI Style 9

What Is Data, Really? 10

Working with structured data 10

Looking at unstructured data 11

Adding semistructured data to the mix 11

Looking Under the Power BI Hood 12

Posing questions with Power Query 13

Modeling with Power Pivot 14

Visualizing with Power View 14

Mapping data with Power Map 14

Interpreting data with Power Q&A 14

Power BI Desktop 15

Power BI Services 15

Knowing Your Power BI Terminology 15

Capacities 16

Workspaces 16

Reports 18

Dashboards 19

Navigation pane 20

Business Intelligence (BI): The Definition 21

Chapter 2: The Who, How, and What of Power BI 23

Highlighting the Who of Power BI 24

Business analyst 24

Data analyst 24

Data engineer 25

Data scientist 26

Database administrator 26

Understanding How Data Comes to Life 27

Prepare 27

Model 28

Visualize 29

Analyze 30

Manage 30

Examining the Various Types of Data Analytics 31

Taking a Look at the Big Picture 32

Chapter 3: Oh, the Choices: Power BI Versions 33

Why Power BI versus Excel? 33

Power BI Products in a Nutshell 35

Introducing the Power BI license options 35

Looking at Desktop versus Services options 36

Stacking Power BI Desktop against Power BI Free 38

Examining the Details of the Licensing Options 38

Seeing how content and collaboration drive licensing 39

Starting with Power BI Desktop 40

Adding a Power BI Free license 41

Upgrading to a Power BI Pro license 42

Going all in with a Power BI Premium license 43

On the Road with Power BI Mobile 44

Working with Power BI Report Server 45

Linking Power BI and Azure 46

Chapter 4: Power BI: The Highlights 47

Power BI Desktop: A Top-Down View 47

Ingesting Data 49

Files or databases? 49

Building data models 52

Analyzing data 53

Creating and publishing items 54

Services: Far and Wide 55

Viewing and editing reports 56

Working with dashboards 60

Collaborating inside Power BI Services 61

Refreshing data 62

Part 2: It's Time to Have a Data Party 65

Chapter 5: Preparing Data Sources 67

Getting Data from the Source 67

Managing Data Source Settings 72

Working with Shared versus Local Datasets 73

Storage Modes 76

Dual mode 77

Considering the Query 77

Addressing and correcting performance 79

Diagnosing queries 80

Exporting Power BI Desktop Files and Leveraging XMLA 81

Chapter 6: Getting Data from Dynamic Sources 85

Getting Data from Microsoft-Based File Systems 86

Working with Relational Data Sources 87

Importing data from a relational data source 89

The good ol' SQL query 91

Importing Data from a Nonrelational Data Source 92

Importing JSON File Data into Power BI 93

Importing Data from Online Sources 95

Creating Data Source Combos 97

Connecting and importing data from Azure Analysis Services 98

Accessing data with Connect Live 99

Dealing with Modes for Dynamic Data 99

Fixing Data Import Errors 100

Time-out expired 100

The data format is not valid 101

Uh-oh - missing data files 101

Transformation isn't always perfect 102

Chapter 7: Cleansing, Transforming, and Loading Your Data 103

Engaging Your Detective Skills to Hunt Down Anomalies and Inconsistencies 104

Checking those data structures and column properties 105

Finding a little help from data statistics 106

Stepping through the Data Lifecycle 107

Resolving inconsistencies 108

Evaluating and Transforming Column Data Types 111

Finding and creating appropriate keys for joins 111

Shaping your column data to meet Power Query requirements 113

Combining queries 115

Tweaking Power Query's M Code 121

Configuring Queries for Data Loading 123

Resolving Errors During Data Import 125

Part 3: The Art and Science of Power Bi 127

Chapter 8: Crafting the Data Model 129

An Introduction to Data Models 129

Working with data schemas 130

Storing values with measures 134

Working with dimensions and fact tables (yet again) 136

Flattening hierarchies 137

Dealing with Table and Column Properties 139

Managing Cardinality and Direction 141

Cardinality 142

Cross-filter direction 142

Data Granularity 144

Chapter 9: Designing and Deploying Data Models 145

Creating a Data Model Masterpiece 145

Working with Data view and Modeling view 146

Importing queries 149

Defining data types 150

Handling formatting and data type properties 151

Managing tables 153

Adding and modifying data to imported, DirectQuery, and composite models 158

Managing Relationships 159

Creating automatic relationships 159

Creating manual relationships 160

Deleting relationships 160

Classifying and codifying data in tables 161

Arranging Data 162

Sorting by and grouping by 162

Hiding data 162

Working with Extended Data Models 164

Knowing the calculation types 164

Working with column contents and joins 165

Publishing Data Models 166

Chapter 10: Perfecting the Data Model 167

Matching Queries with Capacity 168

Deleting unnecessary columns and rows 168

Swapping numeric columns with measures and variables 169

Reducing cardinality 170

Reducing queries 172

Converting to a composite model 173

Creating and managing aggregations 174

Chapter 11: Visualizing Data 183

Looking at Report Fundamentals and Visualizations 183

Creating visualizations 184

Choosing a visualization 185

Filtering data 185

Working with Bar charts and Column charts 188

Using basic Line charts and Area charts 193

Combining Line charts and Bar charts 193

Working with Ribbon charts 195

Going with the flow with Waterfall charts 195

Funneling with Funnel charts 197

Scattering with Scatter charts 198

Salivating with Pie charts and Donut charts 198

Branching out with treemaps 199

Mapping with maps 200

Indicating with indicators 201

Dealing with Table-Based and Complex Visualizations 205

Slicing with slicers 205

Tabling with table visualizations 205

Combing through data with matrices 206

Decomposing with decomposition trees 206

Zooming in on key influencers 207

Dabbling in Data Science 208

Questions and Answers 210

Chapter 12: Pumping Out Reports 213

Formatting and Configuring Report Visualizations 213

Working with basic visualization configurations 215

Applying conditional formatting 220

Filtering and Sorting 221

Configuring the Report Page 223

Refreshing Data 224

Working with reports 225

Finding migrated data 226

Exporting reports 228

Perfecting reports for distribution 229

Chapter 13: Diving into Dashboarding 233

Configuring Dashboards 234

Creating a New Dashboard 234

Enriching Your Dashboard with Content 236

Pinning Reports 238

Customizing with Themes 240

Working with Dashboard Layouts 241

Integrating Q&A 243

Setting Alerts 244

Part 4: Oh, No! There's A Power Bi Programming Language! 247

Chapter 14: Digging Into DAX 249

Discovering DAX 249

Peeking under the DAX hood 250

Working with calculations 253

Dealing with Data Types 258

Operating with Operators 260

Ordering operators 262

Parentheses and order 262

Making a Statement 263

Ensuring Compatibility 263

Chapter 15: Fun with DAX Functions 265

Working with DAX Parameters and Naming Conventions 265

Prefixing parameter names 266

Playing with parameters 267

Using Formulas and Functions 267

Aggregate functions 268

Date-and-time functions 269

Filter functions 271

Financial functions 271

Information functions 274

Logical functions 276

Mathematical and trigonometric functions 277

Other functions 279

Parent-child functions 279

Relationship functions 280

Statistical functions 280

Table manipulation functions 283

Text functions 285

Time intelligence functions 286

Chapter 16: Digging Deeper into DAX 289

Working with Variables 289

Writing DAX Formulas 290

Understanding DAX formulas in depth 290

Extending formulas with measures 290

Comparing measures and columns 296

Syntax and context 296

The syntax of an expression 297

Best Practices for DAX Coding and Debugging in Power BI 297

Using error functions properly 298

Avoiding converting blanks to values 298

Knowing the difference between operators and functions 300

Getting specific 301

Knowing what to COUNT 302

Relationships matter 303

Keeping up with the context 303

Preferring measures over columns 303

Seeing that structure matters 304

Chapter 17: Sharing and the Power BI Workspace 305

Working Together in a Workspace 305

Defining the types of workspaces 306

Figuring out the nuts and bolts of workspaces 308

Creating and Configuring Apps 313

Slicing and Dicing Data 314

Analyzing in Excel 316

Benefiting from Quick Insights 316

Using Usage Metric reports 317

Working with paginated reports 318

Troubleshooting the Use of Data Lineage 318

Datasets, Dataflows, and Lineage 321

Defending Your Data Turf 322

Part 5: Enhancing Your Power Bi Experience 325

Chapter 18: Making Your Data Shine 327

Establishing a Schedule 327

Rolling out the scheduled refresh 328

Refreshing on-premises data 329

Protecting the Data Fortress 331

Configuring for group membership 331

Making role assignments in Power BI Services 333

Sharing the Data Love 334

Refreshing Data in Baby Steps 335

Creating RangeStart and RangeEnd parameters 335

Filtering by RangeStart and RangeEnd 336

Establishing the Incremental Refresh policy 338

Treating Data Like Gold 339

Configuring for Big Data 341

Chapter 19: Extending the Power BI Experience 343

Linking Power Platform and Power BI 343

Powering Up with Power Apps 344

Creating Power App visuals with Power BI 346

Acknowledging the limitations of Power Apps/Power BI integration 350

Introducing the Power BI Mobile app 350

Integrating OneDrive and Power BI 351

Collaboration, SharePoint, and Power BI 354

Differentiating between the classic and modern SharePoint experience 354

Integrating Power BI into SharePoint 365 355

Viewing Power BI reports in SharePoint 356

Automating Workflows with Power BI 358

Configuring prebuilt workflows for Power BI 359

Using the Power Automate Visual with Power BI 362

Unleashing Dynamics 365 for Data Analytics 364

Part 6: The Part of Tens 367

Chapter 20: Ten Ways to Optimize DAX Using Power BI 369

Focusing on Logic 369

Formatting Your Code 370

Keeping the Structure Simple (KISS) 371

Staying Clear of Certain Functions 372

Making Your Measures Meaningful 373

Filtering with a Purpose 374

Transforming Data Purposefully 374

Playing Hide-and-Seek with Your Columns 375

Using All Those Fabulous Functions 376

Rinse, Repeat, Recycle 376

Chapter 21: Ten Ways to Make Compelling Reports Accessible and User-Friendly 379

Navigating the Keyboard 380

Having a Screen Reader As Your Companion 380

Standing Out with Contrast 380

Recognizing Size Matters (with Focus Mode) 381

Switching between Data Tables and Visualizations 382

A Little Extra Text Goes a Long Way 383

Setting Rank and Tab Order 384

It's All About Titles and Labels 384

Leaving Your Markers 386

Keeping with a Theme 387

Index 389

Additional information

NGR9781119824879
9781119824879
1119824877
Microsoft Power BI For Dummies by J Hyman
New
Paperback
John Wiley & Sons Inc
2022-04-04
416
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a new book - be the first to read this copy. With untouched pages and a perfect binding, your brand new copy is ready to be opened for the first time

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