Book Image

QlikView for Developers Cookbook

By : Stephen Redmond
Book Image

QlikView for Developers Cookbook

By: Stephen Redmond

Overview of this book

QlikView has been around since 1993, but has only really taken off in recent years as a leader in the in-memory BI space and, more recently, in the data discovery area. QlikView features the ability to consolidate relevant data from multiple sources into a single application, as well as an associative data model to allow you to explore the data to a way your brain works, state-of-the-art visualizations, dashboard, analysis and reports, and mobile data access. QlikView for Developers Cookbook builds on your initial training and experiences with QlikView to help you become a better developer. This book features plenty of hands-on examples of many challenging functions. Assuming a basic understanding of QlikView development, this book provides a range of step-by-step exercises to teach you different subjects to help build your QlikView developer expertise. From advanced charting and layout to set analysis; from advanced aggregations through to scripting, performance, and security, this book will cover all the areas that you need to know about. The recipes in this book will give you a lot of the information that you need to become an excellent QlikView developer.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
QlikView for Developers Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Consolidating a date-time value into quarter hourly segments


Databases quite often capture date and time information to the millisecond in TimeStamp fields. However, it is rare that you will need to analyze this information to the millisecond or even to the minute. In fact, for the vast majority of implementations, we would only analyze to the day – or even higher.

If you do need to analyze time slices during a day, it would be rare to go down to the minute, mostly it would be to the hour. But it might want to go to the quarter hour. There is some debate on what minutes go into a quarter-hour slice, but I take a mathematical approach (time is a continuous numeric value) to this and use the Round function. Therefore, 11:58 would appear under 12:00 and 12:08 would go to 12:15.

Getting ready

Load the following script:

Load
  TimeCounter,
  Date(TimeStamp) as Date,
  WeekDay(TimeStamp) As WeekDay,
  TimeStamp(Round(TimeStamp, (1/(24))), 'M/D/YY HH:mm') As Hour,
  TimeStamp(Round(TimeStamp, (1/(24...