Book Image

MDX with SSAS 2012 Cookbook - Second Edition

Book Image

MDX with SSAS 2012 Cookbook - Second Edition

Overview of this book

MDX is the BI industry standard for multidimensional calculations and queries. Proficiency with this language is essential for the realization of your Analysis Services' full potential. MDX is an elegant and powerful language, and also has a steep learning curve.SQL Server 2012 Analysis Services has introduced a new BISM tabular model and a new formula language, Data Analysis Expressions (DAX). However, for the multi-dimensional model, MDX is still the only query and expression language. For many product developers and report developers, MDX is the preferred language for both the tabular model and multi-dimensional model. MDX with SSAS 2012 Cookbook is a must-have book for anyone who wants to be proficient in the MDX language and to enhance their business intelligence solutions.MDX with SSAS 2012 Cookbook is packed with immediately usable, practical solutions. It starts with elementary techniques that lay the foundation for designing advanced MDX calculations and queries. The discussions after each solution will provide you with a solid foundation and best practices. It covers a broad range of real-world topics and solutions and provides you with learning materials to become proficient in the language.This book will guide you through the hands-on and practical MDX solutions, best practices, and many intricacies that hide within the MDX calculations and queries. We will start by working with sets, creating time-aware, context-aware calculations, and business analytics solutions, through to the techniques of enhancing the cube design when MDX is not enough. We will then move on to capturing MDX generated by SSAS front-ends and using SSAS stored procedures, and we will explore the whole range of MDX solutions for real-world BI projects.  
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
MDX with SSAS 2012 Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Dissecting and debugging MDX queries


When writing a query involving complex calculations, you might have a hard time trying to debug it, in case there is a problem inside the calculation. But there is a way. By breaking complex sets and calculations into smaller pieces and/or by converting those sets and members into strings, we can visually represent the intermediate results and thereby isolate the problematic part of the query.

True, there's no real debugger in the sense that you can pause the calculation process of the query and evaluate the variables. What you can do is to simulate that by concatenating intermediate results into strings for visual verification.

Getting ready

For this recipe we'll use the final query in the previous recipe, Iterating on a set using recursion. We have chosen this as our example because it's a relatively complex calculation and we want to check if we're doing the right thing.

How to do it…

Follow these steps to create a calculated measure that shows the evaluation...