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QlikView: Advanced Data Visualization

You're reading from   QlikView: Advanced Data Visualization Discover deeper insights with Qlikview by building your own rich analytical applications from scratch

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Product type Course
Published in Dec 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789955996
Length 786 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Barry Harmsen Barry Harmsen
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Barry Harmsen
Miguel  Angel Garcia Miguel Angel Garcia
Author Profile Icon Miguel Angel Garcia
Miguel Angel Garcia
Stephen Redmond Stephen Redmond
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Stephen Redmond
Karl Pover Karl Pover
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Karl Pover
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

QlikView: Advanced Data Visualization
Contributors
Preface
1. Performance Tuning and Scalability FREE CHAPTER 2. QlikView Data Modeling 3. Best Practices for Loading Data 4. Advanced Expressions 5. Advanced Scripting 6. What's New in QlikView 12? 7. Styling Up 8. Building Dashboards 9. Advanced Data Transformation 10. Security 11. Data Visualization Strategy 12. Sales Perspective 13. Financial Perspective 14. Marketing Perspective 15. Working Capital Perspective 16. Operations Perspective 17. Human Resources 18. Fact Sheets 19. Balanced Scorecard 20. Troubleshooting Analysis 21. Mastering Qlik Sense Data Visualization Index

Dealing with multiple fact tables in one model


In data models designed around business processes, we will often have just one source fact table. If we have additional fact tables, they tend to be at a similar grain to the main fact table, which is easier to deal with. Line-of-business documents may have fact tables from lots of different sources that are not at the same grain level at all, but we are still asked to deal with creating the associations. There are, of course, several methods to deal with this scenario.

Joining the fact tables together

If the fact tables have an identical grain, with the exact same set of primary keys, then it is valid to join, using a full outer join, the two tables together. Consider the following example:

Fact:
Load * Inline [
Date, Store, Product, Sales Value
2014-01-01, 1, 1, 100
2014-01-01, 2, 1, 99
2014-01-01, 1, 2, 111
2014-01-01, 2, 2, 97
2014-01-02, 1, 1, 101
2014-01-02, 2, 1, 98
2014-01-02, 1, 2, 112
2014-01-02, 2, 2, 95
];

Join (Fact)
Load * Inline...
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