The Great Function Project – Part 3
Lord of the Rings. Mad Max. Star Wars. Indiana Jones… The Great Function Project.
Lord of the Rings. Mad Max. Star Wars. Indiana Jones… The Great Function Project.
As a Traditional Excel User, I could not stop copying and pasting downloaded reports. Even when my manager diagnosed me with inaccurate month-end reporting, I could not stop using external workbook links
P3 Adaptive has tried many different flavors of our brand of “consulting” through the years, but co-development projects that combine real projects with coaching and knowledge transfer have turned out to have been the sweet spot in terms of success.
Power BI is a business intelligence platform that swoops in like a data superhero, turning scattered numbers into clear, interactive dashboards and reports.
On today’s episode, we sit down with educator, researcher, and all-around information guru Simon Peyton Jones to learn all about programming languages and their impact on hardware, software, and research/development. Simon also brings some professional insight into Excel as a programing language
Let’s start off today’s post with a pop quiz. Once you’ve answered, click here to see the poll results, and then scroll down to see the correct answer
You remember the Great Precedence Project? Well, I have shelved it for now, for two reasons:
OK, picking up from part one…
Let’s start with a simplified version of last post’s pivot – remove one of the row fields, and all of the measures but the base Total Sales measure:
When I last worked on the football project, I had designed my first report and started the process of better understanding my source data, primarily using the =RELATED() function.
It’s not about demos. It’s about decisions, dollars, and doing the hard stuff. AI pilots are easy to love. They’re shiny. They’re fast. They never have to deal with messy […]
AI is revolutionizing data management by automating routine tasks, enhancing data quality, and delivering real-time insights that drive business growth
SQL databases in Microsoft Fabric store, manage, and unify data across operations, analytics, and BI, forming the backbone of enterprise workflows.