Horne I. Hands-On Business Intelligence with DAX.pdf
🏷 Understand DAX, from the basics through to advanced topics, and learn to build effective data models 🏷 Write and use DAX functions and expressions with the help of hands-on examples 🏷 Discover how to handle errors in your DAX code, and avoid unwanted results 🏷 Load data into a data model using Power BI, Excel Power Pivot, and SSAS Tabular 🏷 Cover DAX functions such as date, time, and time intelligence using code examples 🏷 Gain insights into data by using DAX to create new information 🏷 Understand the DAX VertiPaq engine and how it can help you optimize data models
Horne I. Hands-On Business Intelligence with DAX.pdf
🏷 Understand DAX, from the basics through to advanced topics, and learn to build effective data models 🏷 Write and use DAX functions and expressions with the help of hands-on examples 🏷 Discover how to handle errors in your DAX code, and avoid unwanted results 🏷 Load data into a data model using Power BI, Excel Power Pivot, and SSAS Tabular 🏷 Cover DAX functions such as date, time, and time intelligence using code examples 🏷 Gain insights into data by using DAX to create new information 🏷 Understand the DAX VertiPaq engine and how it can help you optimize data models
BY Python 🐍 Work With Data
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China’s stock markets are some of the largest in the world, with total market capitalization reaching RMB 79 trillion (US$12.2 trillion) in 2020. China’s stock markets are seen as a crucial tool for driving economic growth, in particular for financing the country’s rapidly growing high-tech sectors.Although traditionally closed off to overseas investors, China’s financial markets have gradually been loosening restrictions over the past couple of decades. At the same time, reforms have sought to make it easier for Chinese companies to list on onshore stock exchanges, and new programs have been launched in attempts to lure some of China’s most coveted overseas-listed companies back to the country.
The Singapore stock market has alternated between positive and negative finishes through the last five trading days since the end of the two-day winning streak in which it had added more than a dozen points or 0.4 percent. The Straits Times Index now sits just above the 3,060-point plateau and it's likely to see a narrow trading range on Monday.