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You're reading from  Learn Microsoft Fabric

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2024
Reading LevelN/a
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781835082287
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Arshad Ali
Arshad Ali
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Arshad Ali

Arshad Ali is a principal product manager at Microsoft, working on the Microsoft Fabric product team in Redmond, WA. He focuses on Spark Runtime, which empowers both data engineering and data science experiences. In his previous role, he helped strategic customers and partners adopt Azure Synapse and Microsoft Fabric. Arshad has more than 20 years of industry experience and has been with Microsoft for over 16 years. He is the co-author of the book Big Data Analytics with Azure HDInsight and the author of over 200 technical articles and blogs on data and analytics. Arshad holds an MBA from the Foster School of Business at the University of Washington and an MCA from India.
Read more about Arshad Ali

Bradley Schacht
Bradley Schacht
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Bradley Schacht

Bradley Schacht is a principal program manager on the Microsoft Fabric product team based in Saint Augustine, Florida. Bradley is a former consultant and trainer and has co-authored five books on SQL Server and Power BI. As a member of the Microsoft Fabric product team, Bradley works directly with customers to solve some of their most complex data problems and helps shape the future of Microsoft Fabric. Bradley gives back to the community by speaking at events, such as the PASS Summit, SQL Saturday, Code Camp, and user groups across the country, including locally at the Jacksonville SQL Server User Group (JSSUG). He is a contributor on SQLServerCentral and blogs on his personal site, BradleySchacht.
Read more about Bradley Schacht

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Data transformation using T-SQL

With the data now loaded, it is time to transform the data into an aggregate reporting table. In this section, you will create and execute a stored procedure that will create an aggregate table that will be used later in this chapter as the base for a Power BI report.

Let’s look at transforming data using T-SQL:

  1. While still in the query editor of the WideWorldImportersDW data warehouse, click on New SQL query from the ribbon.
  2. In the query window, enter the following code:

Note

The following code should not be used as an example of best practices. In a real-world scenario, loading a data warehouse will involve generating a surrogate key (warehouse key), updating dimension data based on type 1 and type 2 attributes, handling NULL dimension attributes, looking up surrogate key values when loading a fact table, and more. The following code represents a simplified approach to loading dimension and fact tables to show the general...

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Learn Microsoft Fabric
Published in: Feb 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781835082287

Authors (2)

author image
Arshad Ali

Arshad Ali is a principal product manager at Microsoft, working on the Microsoft Fabric product team in Redmond, WA. He focuses on Spark Runtime, which empowers both data engineering and data science experiences. In his previous role, he helped strategic customers and partners adopt Azure Synapse and Microsoft Fabric. Arshad has more than 20 years of industry experience and has been with Microsoft for over 16 years. He is the co-author of the book Big Data Analytics with Azure HDInsight and the author of over 200 technical articles and blogs on data and analytics. Arshad holds an MBA from the Foster School of Business at the University of Washington and an MCA from India.
Read more about Arshad Ali

author image
Bradley Schacht

Bradley Schacht is a principal program manager on the Microsoft Fabric product team based in Saint Augustine, Florida. Bradley is a former consultant and trainer and has co-authored five books on SQL Server and Power BI. As a member of the Microsoft Fabric product team, Bradley works directly with customers to solve some of their most complex data problems and helps shape the future of Microsoft Fabric. Bradley gives back to the community by speaking at events, such as the PASS Summit, SQL Saturday, Code Camp, and user groups across the country, including locally at the Jacksonville SQL Server User Group (JSSUG). He is a contributor on SQLServerCentral and blogs on his personal site, BradleySchacht.
Read more about Bradley Schacht