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Microsoft Power BI Cookbook

You're reading from   Microsoft Power BI Cookbook Creating Business Intelligence Solutions of Analytical Data Models, Reports, and Dashboards

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788290142
Length 802 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Brett Powell Brett Powell
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Brett Powell
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Configuring Power BI Development Tools 2. Accessing and Retrieving Data FREE CHAPTER 3. Building a Power BI Data Model 4. Authoring Power BI Reports 5. Creating Power BI Dashboards 6. Getting Serious with Date Intelligence 7. Parameterizing Power BI Solutions 8. Implementing Dynamic User-Based Visibility in Power BI 9. Applying Advanced Analytics and Custom Visuals 10. Developing Solutions for System Monitoring and Administration 11. Enhancing and Optimizing Existing Power BI Solutions 12. Deploying and Distributing Power BI Content 13. Integrating Power BI with Other Applications

Migrating a Power Pivot for Excel Data Model to Power BI

As Power BI has become more mature as a product and as business users become more comfortable with the platform it's often beneficial to migrate data models (formerly Power Pivot) and M queries from Excel to Power BI. A table of 14 distinct advantages of Power BI over Excel is provided in the See also section of the Configuring Power BI Desktop options and settings recipe in the first chapter, and includes things like greater capacity (1 GB versus 250 MB) and support for Row-level Security (RLS). Additionally, from a data management and governance standpoint, it's preferable to consolidate data models to either Power BI and/or SSAS datasets and to limit Excel's role to ad hoc analysis such as pivot tables connected to datasets in the Power BI Service via Analyze in Excel.

In this brief recipe a data model...

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