Book Image

Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition 12c - Second Edition

By : Adrian Ward, Christian Screen, Haroun Khan
Book Image

Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition 12c - Second Edition

By: Adrian Ward, Christian Screen, Haroun Khan

Overview of this book

Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition (OBIEE) 12c is packed full of features and has a fresh approach to information presentation, system management, and security. OBIEE can help any organization to understand its data, to make useful information from data, and to ensure decision-making is supported by facts. OBIEE can focus on information that needs action, alerting users when conditions are met. OBIEE can be used for data analysis, form production, dashoarding, and workflow processes. We will introduce you to OBIEE features and provide a step-by-step guide to build a complete system from scratch. With this guide, you will be equipped with a good basic understanding of what the product contains, how to install and configure it, and how to create effective Business Intelligence. This book contains the necessary information for a beginner to create a high-performance OBIEE 12c system. This book is also a guide that explains how to use an existing OBIEE 12c system, and shows end users how to create.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition 12c - second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Presentation layer


If we try to do a consistency check at this point, we will find that it throws up an error, as we do not have anything in the presentation layer. So far, we have mapped our data sources and de ned the physical objects. Then, we proceeded to add some business logic and tell the OBIEE server how to handle the physical objects in a way that relates to our business requirements. Now, we need to expose this to our end users.In this layer, we can customize the view of the business model for the end users. This includes renaming objects sensibly without affecting the logical and physical names that will be used to generate queries. To reinforce the point, the names and definitions of presentation tables are separate from logical tables, that is, we can rename the columns to whatever we want without changing the mapping to their associated logical column and onward to their physical column.

We can also choose to widen or limit the scope of the parts of the business model that can...