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Software Development on the SAP HANA Platform

You're reading from   Software Development on the SAP HANA Platform Written by a SAP HANA expert, this book takes you from installation to running your own processes in no time. By the end of the course you'll have awesome data retrieval and analytical powers to call on.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2013
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849689403
Length 328 pages
Edition Edition
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Author (1):
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Mark Walker Mark Walker
Author Profile Icon Mark Walker
Mark Walker
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Software Development on the SAP HANA Platform
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. So, What Is This SAP HANA Thing Anyways? 2. SAP HANA Studio – Installation and First Look FREE CHAPTER 3. Your First SAP HANA Development – An Attribute View 4. Painting with Numbers – An Analytic View 5. Let's Get Graphical – Graphical Calculation Views 6. You Talking to Me? – Scripted Calculation Views 7. Hey! That's My Data! – Authorizations in SAP HANA 8. On Another Level – Hierarchies in SAP HANA 9. Deploying Your Reporting Application to Reporting Software 10. Data Provisioning Using Data Services 11. Application Development Using the XS Engine So Long and Thanks – Where To Go from Here Index

Creating an attribute view


The first object we'll be creating is called an attribute view. This is the basic building-block for nearly all SAP HANA developments.

An attribute view takes the characteristic (text) information from one or more tables, and presents it to the user. It allows several operations to be carried out on data such as the following:

  • Information can be filtered on specific values

  • Tables can be joined together

  • Certain fields can be hidden from the user if they are not appropriate to the current development

    Note

    Attribute views have one major restriction: they cannot work with numeric information. You cannot, for example, use a SALARY or REVENUE field in an attribute view. To work with numeric information, we'll use an analytic view, which we'll be looking at in Chapter 4, Painting with Numbers – An Analytic View.

In our attribute view, we'll be using the data from our CUSTOMER table. This table has four fields: MANDT, CUSTID, SECTOR, and COUNTRY. We'll only be using three of...

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