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BIRT 2.6 Data Analysis and Reporting

You're reading from   BIRT 2.6 Data Analysis and Reporting Create, Design, Format, and Deploy Reports with the world's most popular Eclipse-based Business Intelligence and Reporting Tool

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2010
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849511667
Length 360 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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John Ward John Ward
Author Profile Icon John Ward
John Ward
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

BIRT 2.6 Data Analysis and Reporting
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
1. Preface
1. Getting Started 2. Installing BIRT FREE CHAPTER 3. The BIRT Environment and First Report 4. Visual Report Items 5. Working with Data 6. Report Parameters 7. Report Projects and Libraries 8. Charts, Hyperlinks, and Drilldowns 9. Scripting and Event Handling 10. Deployment

Report projects


Earlier in the book, we created a report project that contains the examples we have built so far. But the concept of what a report project is and how to work with them is has not yet been thoroughly covered.

A report project in Eclipse is simply a high-level container that will be used to store all files in a given project. In Eclipse, projects are simply folders, either contained inside of a workspace or linked to an external file system folder or directory outside of the workspace. What differentiates projects from regular folders is a special file inside this folder that defines various properties for the project and which is usually named project name.project. For our general purpose report development, we don't really need to know anything else about this file; simply knowing that projects are just folders that contain all the files related to our project is enough.

Project types are defined when we first create our project. In earlier versions of BIRT, there was only...

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