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  • Book Overview & Buying Microsoft SQL Server 2014 Business Intelligence Development Beginner's Guide
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Microsoft SQL Server 2014 Business Intelligence Development Beginner's Guide

Microsoft SQL Server 2014 Business Intelligence Development Beginner's Guide

By : Abolfazl Radgoudarzi, Reza Rad
4.1 (14)
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Microsoft SQL Server 2014 Business Intelligence Development Beginner's Guide

Microsoft SQL Server 2014 Business Intelligence Development Beginner's Guide

4.1 (14)
By: Abolfazl Radgoudarzi, Reza Rad

Overview of this book

Written in an easy-to-follow, example-driven format, there are plenty of step-by-step instructions to help get you started! The book has a friendly approach, with the opportunity to learn by experimenting. If you are a BI and Data Warehouse developer new to Microsoft Business Intelligence, and looking to get a good understanding of the different components of Microsoft SQL Server for Business Intelligence, this book is for you. It’s assumed that you will have some experience in databases systems and T-SQL. This book is will give you a good upshot view of each component and scenarios featuring the use of that component in Data Warehousing and Business Intelligence systems.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
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13
Index

Summary

One of the most important functions of data mining is prediction. In this chapter, you've learned how to find the best mining model for the defined problem and the existing dataset. Microsoft Accuracy Chart provided diagrams such as Classification Matrix, Lift Chart, and Cross Validation, which check the mining model against the test dataset. After finding the best mining model(s), you can use the prediction functionality using the DMX language. You've learned about the DMX query structure and cross-prediction joins with the Prediction Join clause. You've applied the mining model pattern on the case table using DMX queries, and you've learned how to use prediction functions such as PredictProbability to fetch the probability of a predictable variable.

In the last section of this chapter, you saw an example of the Time Series algorithm. You've also learned how to provide input data with time frames to the algorithm. And after configuring and training the algorithm...

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