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MDX with Microsoft SQL Server 2016 Analysis Services Cookbook

You're reading from   MDX with Microsoft SQL Server 2016 Analysis Services Cookbook Over 70 practical recipes to analyze multi-dimensional data in SQL Server 2016 Analysis Services cubes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786460998
Length 586 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
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Authors (2):
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Tomislav Piasevoli Tomislav Piasevoli
Author Profile Icon Tomislav Piasevoli
Tomislav Piasevoli
Sherry Li Sherry Li
Author Profile Icon Sherry Li
Sherry Li
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Elementary MDX Techniques FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Sets 3. Working with Time 4. Concise Reporting 5. Navigation 6. MDX for Reporting 7. Business Analyses 8. When MDX is Not Enough 9. Metadata - Driven Calculations 10. On the Edge

Using SSAS Dynamic Management Views (DMVs) to fast-document a cube


Dynamic Management Views (DMV) are Analysis Services schema rowsets (XML/A metadata) exposed as tables, which can be queried with SELECT statements.

DMVs expose information about local Analysis Services server metadata and server operations. For most DMV queries, you use a SELECT statement and the $System schema with an XML/A schema rowset:

SELECT * FROM $System.<schemaRowset> 

The query engine for DMVs is the Data Mining parser. The DMV query syntax is based on the SELECT (DMX) statement. To execute DMV queries, you can use any client application that supports MDX or DMX (Data Mining) queries, including SQL Server Management Studio, a Reporting Services Report, or a Performance Point Dashboard. In this recipe and the next recipe, we use the MDX query window in SSMS.

It is also worth mentioning that although DMV query syntax is based on a SQL SELECT statement, it does not support the full syntax of a SELECT statement...

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