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You're reading from  Data Modeling with Microsoft Excel

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2023
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803240282
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Bernard Obeng Boateng
Bernard Obeng Boateng
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Bernard Obeng Boateng

Bernard Obeng Boateng is a Microsoft Excel MVP, Microsoft Certified Trainer, with over 10 years work experience in Banking, Insurance and Business Development. He is founder of Finex Skills Hub an approved Training Provider of the Financial Modeling Institute, Canada. Finex Skills Hub runs the Finex Project in Ghana, a pro bono student training outreach program for students in Data Analytics and Financial Modeling. Bernard also provides consultancy services for SMEs (start-ups and existing) in Financial Management, Business Planning and Research. He has an active audience online with about 17,000 followers on his LinkedIn Account. where he shares tips and tricks on Microsoft Excel and other Office Apps.
Read more about Bernard Obeng Boateng

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When do we use cube formulas?

Cube formulas should be used when you need more flexibility in your calculations beyond what PivotTables give you. After creating measures, the only way to give expression to the measures in your worksheet is to create PivotTables and drag those measures into the VALUE section of the PivotTable. With cube formulas, your measures do not always have to sit in PivotTables. We can get the measures directly in cells from the data model and use them in calculations in our worksheet.

As an example, if I want to call or see the Total Sales measure we calculated earlier in a cell, we can use CUBEVALUE to retrieve this measure directly from the cube or data model. I used the word “retrieve” because these measures are already calculated and stored by dimensions and hierarchies in the cube. When we use cube formulas, we are essentially using a combination of expressions to retrieve a specific measure or dimension we need from the data model.

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Data Modeling with Microsoft Excel
Published in: Nov 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803240282

Author (1)

author image
Bernard Obeng Boateng

Bernard Obeng Boateng is a Microsoft Excel MVP, Microsoft Certified Trainer, with over 10 years work experience in Banking, Insurance and Business Development. He is founder of Finex Skills Hub an approved Training Provider of the Financial Modeling Institute, Canada. Finex Skills Hub runs the Finex Project in Ghana, a pro bono student training outreach program for students in Data Analytics and Financial Modeling. Bernard also provides consultancy services for SMEs (start-ups and existing) in Financial Management, Business Planning and Research. He has an active audience online with about 17,000 followers on his LinkedIn Account. where he shares tips and tricks on Microsoft Excel and other Office Apps.
Read more about Bernard Obeng Boateng