Book Image

Microsoft Power BI Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Greg Deckler, Brett Powell
Book Image

Microsoft Power BI Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Greg Deckler, Brett Powell

Overview of this book

The complete everyday reference guide to Power BI, written by an internationally recognized Power BI expert duo, is back with a new and updated edition. Packed with revised practical recipes, Microsoft Power BI Cookbook, Second Edition, helps you navigate Power BI tools and advanced features. It also demonstrates the use of end-to-end solutions that integrate those features to get the most out of Power BI. With the help of the recipes in this book, you’ll gain advanced design and development insight, practical tips, and guidance on enhancing existing Power BI projects. The updated recipes will equip you with everything you need to know to implement evergreen frameworks that will stay relevant as Power BI updates. You’ll familiarize yourself with Power BI development tools and services by going deep into the data connectivity, transformation, modeling, visualization, and analytical capabilities of Power BI. By the end of this book, you’ll make the most of Power BI’s functional programming languages of DAX and M and deliver powerful solutions to common business intelligence challenges.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
14
Other Book You May Enjoy
15
Index

Forecasting with what-if analysis

Power BI can be used to directly support the creation of forecasts, budgets, and other planned values of future business measures and events. The relationships and logic of these datasets, which are commonly implemented in Excel formulas and maintained by business teams, can be efficiently replicated within a dedicated Power BI Desktop file. Isolating the what-if input variables from the forecast creation, storage, and visualization in Power BI enables users to more easily create, analyze, and collaborate on business forecasts.

In this recipe, a Power Desktop model is used to ingest forecast-variable inputs from Excel, and process these variables with a dynamic transformation process to generate a forecast table available for visualization. This design enables business teams to rapidly iterate on forecasts, and ultimately supports an official or approved forecast or plan that could be integrated with other data models.

Getting ready

To...