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QlikView for Developers

You're reading from   QlikView for Developers Design and build scalable and maintainable BI solutions

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786469847
Length 546 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Miguel  Angel Garcia Miguel Angel Garcia
Author Profile Icon Miguel Angel Garcia
Miguel Angel Garcia
Barry Harmsen Barry Harmsen
Author Profile Icon Barry Harmsen
Barry Harmsen
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

QlikView for Developers
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgements
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
1. Meet QlikView FREE CHAPTER 2. What's New in QlikView 12? 3. Seeing is Believing 4. Data Sources 5. Data Modeling 6. Styling Up 7. Building Dashboards 8. Scripting 9. Data Modeling Best Practices 10. Basic Data Transformation 11. Advanced Expressions 12. Set Analysis and Point In Time Reporting 13. Advanced Data Transformation 14. More on Visual Design and User Experience 15. Security Index

Ordering, peeking, and matching all at once


In the earlier sections, we have discussed three different functions commonly used in data transformation. We will now present a use case in which all three functions will complement each other to achieve a specific task.

The use case

We know that the IntervalMatch function makes use of closed intervals already defined in a table. What happens if all we have is a start date? To illustrate this scenario, look at the following screenshot:

As you can see, the End Date field has disappeared. However, there is a way for us to guess it and assign the corresponding value, based on the start date of the immediate following record. That is, if one record starts on 1-Feb-1998 and the immediate following starts on 1-Jan-2000, it means that the first interval ended on 31-Dec-1999, right?

In order for us to calculate the end date, we need to first sort the table values so that all corresponding records are contiguous, then "peek" at the start value from the next...

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