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Expert Data Modeling with Power BI, Second Edition

You're reading from   Expert Data Modeling with Power BI, Second Edition Enrich and optimize your data models to get the best out of Power BI for reporting and business needs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803246246
Length 698 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Soheil Bakhshi Soheil Bakhshi
Author Profile Icon Soheil Bakhshi
Soheil Bakhshi
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section I: Data Modeling in Power BI
2. Introduction to Data Modeling in Power BI FREE CHAPTER 3. Data Analysis eXpressions and Data Modeling 4. Section II: Data Preparation in Query Editor
5. Data Preparation in Power Query Editor 6. Getting Data from Various Sources 7. Common Data Preparation Steps 8. Star Schema Preparation in Power Query Editor 9. Data Preparation Common Best Practices 10. Section III: Data Modeling
11. Data Modeling Components 12. Star Schema and Data Modeling Common Best Practices 13. Section IV: Advanced Data Modeling
14. Advanced Data Modeling Techniques 15. Row-Level and Object-Level Security 16. Dealing with More Advanced Data Warehousing Concepts in Power BI 17. Introduction to Dataflows 18. DirectQuery Connections to Power BI Datasets and Analysis Services in Composite Models 19. New Options, Features, and DAX Functions 20. Other Books You May Enjoy
21. Index

Optimize query size

This section discusses other data preparation best practices to improve our model. Optimizing queries’ sizes can reduce the data refresh time. A model with an optimized size performs better after we import the data into the data model. In the following subsections, we look at some techniques that help us optimize queries.

Remove unnecessary columns and rows

In real-world scenarios, we might deal with large tables with hundreds of millions of rows and hundreds of columns. Some Power BI developers import all columns and rows from all data sources, resulting in poor-performing reports. As stated before, Power BI uses the xVelocity engine, which uses in-memory data processing for data analytics based on column cardinality. Therefore, fewer columns directly translate to less memory consumption and, as a result, a more performant data model. In many real-world scenarios, we need the business’s approval to remove unwanted columns from tables.

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