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QlikView 11 for Developers

You're reading from   QlikView 11 for Developers This book is smartly built around a practical case study – HighCloud Airlines – to help you gain an in-depth understanding of how to build applications for Business Intelligence using QlikView. A superb hands-on guide.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849686068
Length 534 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

QlikView 11 for Developers
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Meet QlikView 2. Seeing is Believing FREE CHAPTER 3. Data Sources 4. Data Modeling 5. Styling Up 6. Building Dashboards 7. Scripting 8. Data Modeling Best Practices 9. Basic Data Transformation 10. Advanced Expressions 11. Set Analysis and Point In Time Reporting 12. Advanced Data Transformation 13. More on Visual Design and User Experience 14. Security Index

Sorting tables


We will now introduce the Order By statement, which is added to a Load statement and is used to sort an input table based on certain fields. There is one major condition for the Order By statement to work: it must be applied to a Load statement getting data from a Resident table, not from a table file or any other source.

Some databases can receive Order By instructions in the Select query, but in this section we will only deal with Order By statements on the QlikView side.

The Order By statement must receive at least one field name over which the ordering will be performed and, optionally, the sort order (either ascending or descending). If the sort order is not specified along with the field name, the default sort order will be applied, which is ascending.

An example script of an Order By statement at play is:

Load
 Region,
 Date,
 Amount
Resident SalesTable
Order By Date asc;

In this script, we are loading three fields (Region, Date, and Amount) from a previously loaded table...

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