Book Image

Data Analysis Using SQL and Excel - Second Edition

By : Gordon S. S. Linoff
Book Image

Data Analysis Using SQL and Excel - Second Edition

By: Gordon S. S. Linoff

Overview of this book

Data Analysis Using SQL and Excel, 2nd Edition shows you how to leverage the two most popular tools for data query and analysis—SQL and Excel—to perform sophisticated data analysis without the need for complex and expensive data mining tools. Written by a leading expert on business data mining, this book shows you how to extract useful business information from relational databases. You'll learn the fundamental techniques before moving into the "where" and "why" of each analysis, and then learn how to design and perform these analyses using SQL and Excel. Examples include SQL and Excel code, and the appendix shows how non-standard constructs are implemented in other major databases, including Oracle and IBM DB2/UDB. The companion website includes datasets and Excel spreadsheets, and the book provides hints, warnings, and technical asides to help you every step of the way. Data Analysis Using SQL and Excel, 2nd Edition shows you how to perform a wide range of sophisticated analyses using these simple tools, sparing you the significant expense of proprietary data mining tools like SAS.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Foreword
17
EULA

What’s on the Website

The companion website (at www.wiley.com/go/dataanalysisusingsqlandexcel2e) contains datasets used in the book. These datasets contain the following information:

  • Reference tables. There are three reference tables, two containing census information (from the 2000 Census) and one containing calendar information about dates.
  • Subscribers dataset. This is data describing a subset of customers in a mobile telephone company.
  • Purchases dataset. This is data describing customer purchase patterns.

This data is available for download, along with instructions for loading it into SQL Server and other databases.

In addition, the companion website has pages with additional information, such as scripts for loading the data into common databases, spreadsheets containing the SQL queries, and all the tables and charts in the book that were generated using Excel.