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Power BI for the Desktop

Business Intelligence Part III

páginaprincipal.livro.por Duncan Williamson
80
páginaprincipal.livro.idioma:  English
This book will extend your visualisation and modelling skills into Power BI for Desktop. This book starts in Excel and very quickly moves into Power BI to demonstrate the visualisation of data…
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This book will help you to extend your visualisation and modelling skills into the Power BI for Desktop realm. As you are an existing user of Microsoft Excel, this book starts in Excel and very quickly moves into Power BI to demonstrate its power in terms of the visualisation of data and the simple, intermediate and advance forms of modelling that you can then achieve. The book starts with an overview of what Power BI can help financial modellers to achieve: we are aiming in this course to take you from zero or little Power BI knowledge, to visualising and modelling at an intermediate level.

About the author

Duncan Williamson is addicted to lifelong learning and uses the opportunity of writing books for Bookboon as  an excuse to study new ideas and materials in his chosen areas of interest. Duncan holds an  MBA from the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, a Certificate of Education from Sunderland Polytechnic and an HND in Business Studies from Teesside Polytechnic. In addition, Duncan has successfully completed the Diploma of the Chartered Institute of Marketing and recently received a Certificate in Data Analysis from the University of Texas at Austin.

Duncan has studied, worked with and taught many aspects of management accounting, financial accounting and bookkeeping, financial reporting under IFRS, corporate finance, financial analysis, financial and spreadsheet modelling. He has worked on the financial and economic appraisal of projects in several countries over many years. He has published books and articles, case studies and so on. Over the last four years or so, Duncan has written four books for Bookboon in his series, Excel Solutions for Accountants, as well as two books on Finance for the Non Financial Manager and a book on Report Writing for  Finance Professionals. He also wrote the book The Accounting and Bookkeeping Coach, published in April 2014 by Hodder and Stoughton, Prentice Hall published his Cost and Management Accounting in 1995 and he has self published a number of books including his 2012 major spreadsheet book The Excel Project … available on amazon.co.uk. Duncan has also written and published a wide number of books aimed at pre University and first year undergraduate level students.

Duncan has always loved travelling and over the last three decades or so he has lived and worked (from as little as a week to as long as five years) in such countries as Malawi, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Romania, United Kingdom, Denmark, Afghanistan, Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Kuwait, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, Hungary, Thailand, Singapore, Vietnam, Malaysia, Bahrain, Pakistan, Holland, Sudan, Albania, Qatar, Mexico, Angola, Ghana, Tanzania, Angola and Mozambique.

In terms of hobbies and interests, Duncan clearly loves travelling: in addition to the countries he has worked in, he has visited another 35 – 40 countries. Cultural and ethnic differences and similarities are a fascination for him too. Duncan loves taking photographs and reckons that for every hundred of his serious attempts at photography, one might be good! Duncan loves writing and creating training and learning materials; both for his work and as part of his lifelong learning crusade: keeping his brain cells fully engaged. More than that, you will find Duncan on discussion lists, in various online forums in which he fully engages with others in putting the world to rights and to helping people solve their Excel, modelling and accounting problems.

Another travel connection comes from Duncan's modelling and spreadsheeting skills with which he has recently started to model data from commercial aircraft: altitude, speed, latitudes and longitudes; mapping the history of a particular aircraft over a one year period, that can involve as many as 1,000, 1,500 and even more flights. This aspect of his interests involves using Excel and Power BI.

Even though he lives in Thailand now, he still follows the English Premier League and his favourite club Burnley FC.

  • Introduction to the Business Intelligence Series
  1. Data from Excel to Power BI to Excel
    1. Taking data from Excel to Power BI
    2. Exporting data from Power BI to Excel
    3. Copy Data from Data View in Power BI Desktop and Paste it to Destination
    4. Copy Data from Query Editor in Power BI Desktop and Paste it to Destination
    5. Export Data from Power BI Desktop to CSV or TXT Using DAX Studio
    6. Importing Power BI Desktop Directly to Excel
  2. Get Data
    1. Getting data from various sources
  3. Visualisation I
    1. Drag and drop data from a Query into a Visualisation
  4. Visualisation II
    1. Using Slicers
    2. Drill Through
    3. Drill through reports
    4. Cross Filter
    5. Formatting/Conditional Formatting
    6. Filtering
    7. ToolTips
  5. Generating Ideas
    1. The Insights Feature
    2. Key Influencers
    3. Decomposition Tree
  6. Modelling
    1. Measures
    2. New Parameters
    3. New Column
    4. Copy Queries
    5. Trendline
    6. Forecast
  7. Editing Queries
    1. Cleaning data
    2. Split Columns
    3. Replace Values
    4. Data Types
    5. Transform
    6. Add Columns
  8. Combining Tables
    1. Merge Queries
    2. Append Queries
  9. The M Language
    1. Examples of M Code in an Existing File
    2. Where can you write PBI M Code?
    3. Standard Function Library
    4. Expressions and Values in PBI
    5. Expressions
    6. Examples of M Language Expressions
    7. Finding and Exploring M Language Functions
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