Another great release. Thank you. There are two dislikes to this video.... I wonder what kind of person clicks that on a free informative video like this.
Hi Kahn, glad that you appreciated our content! If you haven't yet, you can subscribe to our channel to see all our upcoming Power BI and Power Platform video tutorials and announcements. Cheers!
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When would you use a single date table with active and inactive relationships over multiple date tables when you have more than one date object in your fact table?
I would very much most often only use a single date table, and use the USERELATIONSHIP function in DAX to "activate" inactive relationships; stay tuned for Best Practices Volume 3...
Hi Mohannad Hammad, glad you appreciated the video. You can subscribe to our channel to see all our upcoming Power BI video tutorials. Here’s the link: th-cam.com/channels/y2rBgj4M1tzK-urTZ28zcA.html
Hi London, you can check the description for links of the other videos in this mini series. You can also subscribe to our channel to see all our upcoming Power BI video tutorials. Cheers!
Good day thank you for this video. Question, I in order to design/use Fact and Dimension tables in Power BI as described in this video there would have to be an SSIS solution that would have retrieved the data from the source systems and then create the Fact and Dimension tables right? After which those Facts and Dimensions and pulled into Power BI?
Not at all ... you can easily load from a single source (say CSV file) into Power BI, and reference the data once for your each fact table and again once for each of your dimensions; SSIS is by no means required
Another great release. Thank you. There are two dislikes to this video.... I wonder what kind of person clicks that on a free informative video like this.
Dislikes by those who like worst practices.
Thanks for this excellent tutorial.
Hi Kahn, glad that you appreciated our content! If you haven't yet, you can subscribe to our channel to see all our upcoming Power BI and Power Platform video tutorials and announcements. Cheers!
@@EnterpriseDNA I subscribed your great channel already. Still waiting for next exciting from your videos. Thanks.
Really Helpful Data Modelling Tips...Thank You Greg
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I can not wait for the next videos..thanks!!
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Pro tip : watch series on KaldroStream. Me and my gf have been using them for watching lots of of movies recently.
@Vivaan Aidan Definitely, I have been using KaldroStream for months myself :)
great videos.. from Philippines
Hi Mr.Paco, glad you appreciated the video. We are so grateful to have had such positive feedback.
Thanks for the video guys!
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When would you use a single date table with active and inactive relationships over multiple date tables when you have more than one date object in your fact table?
I would very much most often only use a single date table, and use the USERELATIONSHIP function in DAX to "activate" inactive relationships; stay tuned for Best Practices Volume 3...
@@gregphilpsful what do you think about leaving all relationships inactives for dates?
Thanks
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Where is the first pillar please? Thanks
Hi London, you can check the description for links of the other videos in this mini series. You can also subscribe to our channel to see all our upcoming Power BI video tutorials. Cheers!
Good day thank you for this video.
Question, I in order to design/use Fact and Dimension tables in Power BI as described in this video there would have to be an SSIS solution that would have retrieved the data from the source systems and then create the Fact and Dimension tables right?
After which those Facts and Dimensions and pulled into Power BI?
Not at all ... you can easily load from a single source (say CSV file) into Power BI, and reference the data once for your each fact table and again once for each of your dimensions; SSIS is by no means required
@@gregphilpsful thank you very much for your response Greg. I appreciate it