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Business Intelligence with MicroStrategy Cookbook

You're reading from   Business Intelligence with MicroStrategy Cookbook Over 90 practical, hands-on recipes to help you build your MicroStrategy business intelligence project, including more than a 100 screencasts with this book and ebook

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782179757
Length 356 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Davide Moraschi Davide Moraschi
Author Profile Icon Davide Moraschi
Davide Moraschi
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Business Intelligence with MicroStrategy Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started with MicroStrategy 2. The First Steps in a MicroStrategy Project FREE CHAPTER 3. Schema Objects – Attributes 4. Objects – Facts and Metrics 5. Data Display and Manipulation – Reports 6. Data Analysis and Visualization – Graphs 7. Analysis on the Web – Documents and Dashboards 8. Dynamic Selection with Filters and Prompts 9. Mobile BI for Developers 10. Mobile BI for Users 11. Consolidations, Custom Groups, and Transformations 12. In-Memory Cubes and Visual Insight 13. MicroStrategy Express Solution to Exercises Where to Look for Information Cloudera Hadoop HP Vertica Index

Introduction


At this point, you should have a testing machine ready-to-use with all the samples in place. In the previous chapter, we have learned how to install SQL Server and the MicroStrategy platform. In this chapter, we start creating the schema objects that represent the building blocks of our BI project.

Schema objects are the metadata components that are logically closer to the physical structure of the database; they are used to create more complex elements (applications or public objects) that will later form reports and documents. Facts and tables, for example, are schema objects. Also attributes, which we'll cover in Chapter 3, Schema Objects – Attributes, are schema objects.

The first schema objects that we need to identify are the tables holding our facts and dimensions.

Note

We will use the sample database AdventureWorks, which is about a sport gear shop. The size of the data is limited but the overall structure of the tables is quite interesting and covers a number of use cases...

You have been reading a chapter from
Business Intelligence with MicroStrategy Cookbook
Published in: Oct 2013
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781782179757
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