The user-defined table is used to create a view within Essbase Studio. User-defined tables should give you some flexibility without having to change the data source. This functionality is going to be important when defining your metadata. Furthermore, this flexibility is valuable in environments where the Essbase developers cannot modify the data source at the risk of impacting other Essbase applications or relational reporting. In this recipe, we will add a user-defined table to our data source and then add that table to the TBC minischema.
Oracle Essbase 11 Development Cookbook
By :
Oracle Essbase 11 Development Cookbook
By:
Overview of this book
Oracle Essbase is a Multi-Dimensional Online Analytical Processing (OLAP) server, providing a rich environment for effectively developing custom analytic and enterprise performance management applications. Oracle Essbase enables business users to quickly model complex business scenarios.
This practical cookbook shows you the advanced development techniques when building Essbase Applications and how to take these applications further.
Packed with over 90 task-based and immediately reusable recipes, this book starts by showing you how to use a relational data model to build and load an Essbase cube and how to create a data source, prepare the mini schema, and work with the data elements in Essbase Studio. The book then dives into topics such as building the BSO cube, building the ASO cube, using EAS for development, creating Calculation Scripts and using MaxL to automate processes.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Oracle Essbase 11 Development Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Understanding and Modifying Data Sources
Using Essbase Studio
Building the BSO Cube
Building the ASO Cube
Using EAS for Development
Creating Calculation Scripts
Using MaxL to Automate Process
Data Integration
Provisioning Security Using MaxL Editor or Shared Services
Developing Dynamic Reports
Index
Customer Reviews