This was great. I was just working on a project that needed to have data from multiple reports in one place. this video has really helped me understand what I need.
Another top-notch video. Happy recommending your videos because they are consistently well-prepared, clearly presented and excellent for learning from.
hey from morroco I wanted to express my sincerest gratitude for the amazing content you consistently share on your TH-cam channel. Your videos have been a constant source of inspiration and entertainment for me, and I truly appreciate the effort and passion you put into each one. Thank you for creating such valuable and enjoyable content
Thank you sooo much!!! No one else I seen explained it or did it this way. A lot of people say to import from a folder, but that way runs into so many errors and then it puts each table on a different sheet. So thank you very much!!
No way. I was watching your another video about Pivot Table. And you didn't mention anything about multiple sheets. So I ended up Google it. But boom you just posted a video 35 mins ago. Thank you!
I think of myself as pretty good with pivot tables, but I've never used Power Query to combine source data before, so it's good to learn something new.
This is pretty cool way to import large chunks of data. It appears you do the query on the same workbook. I wouldn't think it would allow you do that since you're essentially loading a workbook while it's open. I tried this on my data and had to close the workbook to get it to work.
Great video! Relationships in Excel could make a lot of database use obsolete. Is there any practical size limit, beyond which using a database for the raw data would be more robust? I currently use Access database for this kind of work and it's been rock solid-my basic approach is Access for data, Excel for analysis and presentation.
I have the same approach. I guess it is also about what the data is (numbers or text) and how much data must be related. If it requires calculations I try to use Excel for the numbers. But printed reports are much easier made in Access. But I am also curious when to use what.
Power Query can handle large amounts of data, more so than you're able to load into an Excel sheet. Excel maxes out at a little over a million rows. I also used to use Access back in the day when I analyzed millions of rows of data, but this provides an alternative if you're comfortable using Excel.
I love your tutorials, very well explained and easy to comprehend. I would like to know, which version of Microsoft excel are you using for illustrations. Thank You.
Kevin, hello! First of all, let me thanks you for your lessons, they are great and useful. I'd like to ask you about how to connect several tables with different data into one pivot? In this lesson you used the tables with the similar headers, but what if my tables have different data and different quantity of columns? I have a timesheet tables of workers (one month in one table). The common between my tables is the names of workers and the project names, but none of them are the same each month.
You can rename the column header before append the query. It will match according to column name, so do not need the worry two tables have different quantity of columns. E.g this platform ABC may use the column header as OrderID, the platform XYZ is Order Number. You just need to rename Order Number to OrderID will do.
This is a great educational tool. The issue is that version 2016 menus are completely different with some options not available. I am also so new to Excel that I could be lost.
Thank you so much for the very useful tips, right in time for my massive report. However, can I know if we can keep adding tabs/ sheet to the current append data? It looks like I have to rerun the append process in order to add new sheet. Thank you.
Awesome!! Please if you want to capitalize an already typed data in a sheet what is the shortcut in excel (I'm finding that tedious) Thank you for the sample workbooks too
Hi Kevin, thank you for this awesome tutorial. However, I have a question. As a best practice, it is advisable to convert our data to a table before building out a PivotTable to support a growing dataset. So, my question is do we have to convert the datasets to tables before exporting to Power Query for consolidation?
Hi Kevin, this video has been incredibly useful. Just one question ... when I pull in the data into the main pivot table it always rounds the numbers up or down. Is there anyway to leave the numbers unrounded? I've tried formatting the pivot table to to decimal figures but it just seems that the numbers it pulls in have already been rounded. Thanks for your great work 🙂
Go from Excel novice to data analysis ninja in just 2 hours: kevinstratvert.thinkific.com/
😊
Best excel presenter on TH-cam. Thanks Kevin
By far the easiest tutorial on making pivot table from multiple sheets in excel. Thank you.
One of the best tutorials I have ever watched. Thanks for supplying the source material so that we could follow along.
This was great. I was just working on a project that needed to have data from multiple reports in one place. this video has really helped me understand what I need.
Another top-notch video. Happy recommending your videos because they are consistently well-prepared, clearly presented and excellent for learning from.
hey from morroco I wanted to express my sincerest gratitude for the amazing content you consistently share on your TH-cam channel. Your videos have been a constant source of inspiration and entertainment for me, and I truly appreciate the effort and passion you put into each one. Thank you for creating such valuable and enjoyable content
I have no use for a pivot table at the present, it's good to have this available for future use. As always Kevin valuable information. Thanks Kevin.
It's one of the best / easiest to use analysis tools. It's a good one to have in your toolbelt.
It's absolutely amazing 🤩, thank you Kevin for the valuable content
Thank you sooo much!!! No one else I seen explained it or did it this way. A lot of people say to import from a folder, but that way runs into so many errors and then it puts each table on a different sheet. So thank you very much!!
OH! This is like you read my mind. I totally need this for my work! Thanks Kevin!
big round of applause for you boss! learned tons of knowledge from you, thank you.
The easiest tutorial ever. Thank you so much. It's seemed so daunting and now it's not!!!! I did it
Best excel tutorial channel I’ve ever seen. Thank you!
Always my best option when ever it comes to office products thank you sir. Much appreciated
Simply amazing and powerful tools in MS Excel. Great video, Kevin.
Great presentation Kevin.
Thanks.
That was an amazing video, I learned so much in such a short time and was able to immediately put it to use. Thank you!
Thank you so much! God bless you❤❤❤!!
Great Kevin,
A very common need with very good and clear explanation.
It will help a lot.
No way. I was watching your another video about Pivot Table. And you didn't mention anything about multiple sheets. So I ended up Google it. But boom you just posted a video 35 mins ago.
Thank you!
Thank you so much Kevin. I think the KevinCookieCompany has more to offer us. Delicious cookies and great MS Excel content.
Another fantastic video where it was clear explanations and examples! Thanks!
Thanks Kevin for sharing best excel content
Brilliant - Thanks
I think of myself as pretty good with pivot tables, but I've never used Power Query to combine source data before, so it's good to learn something new.
Just created a report for my client. Thank you so much
Thanks Kevin.
The carefully chosen selection of datasets was very helpful and made learning the steps self explanatory and motivating. Excellent work.
Perfect you may make it soo easy thank you very much😊
Hello "Kevin Stratvert"! Thank you for showing us such a wonderful video! I feel so happy! I'm looking forward to your next work! Have a nice day!
thanks!
I have so much work to do now! 😀Thank you!!!
hopefully it makes all that work easier 😉
wow wow wow , god only knows how much time you saved for me from this video , big heart for you kevin
You explained it so well. Thank you so much Kevin!
Awesome tutorial - you've saved me so time and effort. This is like pivoting on steroids!
I was looking for this for a while. Thanks
Exactly what I was looking for.
Thank you!
Very well put together and easy to follow, thank you
This is great stuff! I'm going to try this out with my end of year data!
This is awesome! Thank YOU Kevin!
Great video sir. Thank you
Thank you Kevin, you are an excellent tutor
OMG Thank you. Learned something new that will help me meet a goal by end of week.
i am impressed the way you are teaching is amazing
thank you very much. This has been such a huge help and made my work super convenient and easier. :)
Can't thank you more Kevin.
Great! i guess it is what i really needed lesson. Thank you Kevin .
Kavin! You are saiving my life!
Great - as always! Thanks a stack, Kevin!
Awesome work 👍 12:08
Kevin, this is just fabulous....keep it coming
Great tutorial
thanks!
This is perfection. Thank you.
TOP SHELF THANK YOU! SAVED MY DAY 🙂
Thank u Kevin
Thank you, this will be very helped
Thanks Kelvin, this is very helpful
This is exactly what I have been looking for and such a great lesson. Thank you so much Kevin!
Can't thank u enough for this 😊
more than great
Great Video! Thank you very much!
Thanks 🙏
You are so amazing! Thank you so much!
Very Informative. Thanks for the valuable tutorial.
💗
Thank you
You rock Kevin!!❤
Thank you so much!! Great video
God bless you sir
what a beautiful explanation...you are not quick in ur explanation that makes it very easy to understand....
Thanks a lot! Really helpful 👏
Thank you for the video. It's really helpful for me
Many thanks Kevin
Thank you so much ❤
This was very good content especially the relationships feature which I haven't seen discussed much in similar channels
it's getting close to database territory 😯
This is pretty cool way to import large chunks of data. It appears you do the query on the same workbook. I wouldn't think it would allow you do that since you're essentially loading a workbook while it's open. I tried this on my data and had to close the workbook to get it to work.
Make sure one drive is turned off! I had to turn my off to get rid of that error! It needs to be saved locally and not on a cloud.
Great video! Relationships in Excel could make a lot of database use obsolete.
Is there any practical size limit, beyond which using a database for the raw data would be more robust? I currently use Access database for this kind of work and it's been rock solid-my basic approach is Access for data, Excel for analysis and presentation.
I have the same approach. I guess it is also about what the data is (numbers or text) and how much data must be related. If it requires calculations I try to use Excel for the numbers. But printed reports are much easier made in Access. But I am also curious when to use what.
Power Query can handle large amounts of data, more so than you're able to load into an Excel sheet. Excel maxes out at a little over a million rows. I also used to use Access back in the day when I analyzed millions of rows of data, but this provides an alternative if you're comfortable using Excel.
This is just so cool!
amazing video content, it really help, thanks Kevin
Nice
I love your tutorials, very well explained and easy to comprehend. I would like to know, which version of Microsoft excel are you using for illustrations. Thank You.
thanks
of course!
@@KevinStratvert its an honor to share it with us, thank you so much for this very informative and intelligently presented discussion......
Cannot thank you enough!👏
Kevin, hello! First of all, let me thanks you for your lessons, they are great and useful. I'd like to ask you about how to connect several tables with different data into one pivot? In this lesson you used the tables with the similar headers, but what if my tables have different data and different quantity of columns? I have a timesheet tables of workers (one month in one table). The common between my tables is the names of workers and the project names, but none of them are the same each month.
You can rename the column header before append the query. It will match according to column name, so do not need the worry two tables have different quantity of columns.
E.g this platform ABC may use the column header as OrderID, the platform XYZ is Order Number. You just need to rename Order Number to OrderID will do.
This is a great educational tool. The issue is that version 2016 menus are completely different with some options not available. I am also so new to Excel that I could be lost.
Real heros don't wear capes ❤
You’re awesome.
Amazing tutorial. Next up, how to calculate between two columns in a power pivot
❤ amazing 😍
Thank you
thank you so much
Thank you so much for the very useful tips, right in time for my massive report.
However, can I know if we can keep adding tabs/ sheet to the current append data? It looks like I have to rerun the append process in order to add new sheet. Thank you.
Wow.. that was Gooooooooooooooooooood
Awesome.
Great!
Oh, Kevin!
Awesome!!
Please if you want to capitalize an already typed data in a sheet what is the shortcut in excel (I'm finding that tedious)
Thank you for the sample workbooks too
Hello Kevin, Great video! Very helpful.
Will append work if the no. of rows in two files are more than a 1 million each?
Hi Kevin, thank you for this awesome tutorial. However, I have a question. As a best practice, it is advisable to convert our data to a table before building out a PivotTable to support a growing dataset. So, my question is do we have to convert the datasets to tables before exporting to Power Query for consolidation?
Would you please do a forecast and actual budget by using vlook up and pivot table? I ❤your videos
Amazing
Hi Kevin, this video has been incredibly useful. Just one question ... when I pull in the data into the main pivot table it always rounds the numbers up or down. Is there anyway to leave the numbers unrounded? I've tried formatting the pivot table to to decimal figures but it just seems that the numbers it pulls in have already been rounded. Thanks for your great work 🙂
First view and 2nd comment
Can I use Power Query to combine monthly sales from different workbooks with different column headers?