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Qlik Sense Cookbook

You're reading from   Qlik Sense Cookbook Over 80 recipes on data analytics to solve business intelligence challenges

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788997058
Length 334 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (3):
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Philip Hand Philip Hand
Author Profile Icon Philip Hand
Philip Hand
Neeraj Kharpate Neeraj Kharpate
Author Profile Icon Neeraj Kharpate
Neeraj Kharpate
Pablo Labbe Pablo Labbe
Author Profile Icon Pablo Labbe
Pablo Labbe
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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with the Data FREE CHAPTER 2. Visualizations 3. Scripting 4. Managing Apps and the User Interface 5. Useful Functions 6. Set Analysis 7. Using Extensions in Qlik Sense 8. Advanced Aggregation with AGGR 9. Tips and Tricks 10. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using the Fractile() function to generate quartiles


Qlik Sense provides a host of statistical functions that can be put to effective use based on requirements in user reports. At a recent implementation, one of the requirements that popped out was to divide the data values into four quartiles. Quartiles are equivalent to percentiles that divide the data into four groups. The first quartile is determined by every value that is equal to and less than the twenty-fifth percentile. The second quartile is determined by every value that is between the twenty-fifth and the fiftieth percentile. The third quartile is determined by every value that is between the fiftieth and the seventy-fifth percentile. The fourth quartile will be all the data values above and beyond the value of the seventy-fifth percentile. In order to generate quartiles in Qlik Sense, we make use of the Fractile() function. The following recipe explains the process.

Getting ready

For the sake of this recipe, we create a hypothetical...

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