133
                                            Książki
                                            Que Corporation
                                        
                                        Excel 2013 Pivot Table Data Crunching
                                                                                                            Wydawnictwo:
                                                                                                        
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            Que Corporation
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            
                                                
                                                                                                                                                    Oprawa: Miękka
                                                                                            Opis
                                CRUNCH ANY DATA, FROM ANY SOURCE, QUICKLY AND EASILY, WITH EXCEL 2013 PIVOT TABLES! Use Excel 2013 pivot tables and pivot charts to produce powerful, dynamic reports in minutes instead of hours...understand exactly what's going on in your business...take control, and stay in control! Even if you've never created a pivot table before, this book will help you leverage all their amazing flexibility and analytical power. In just the first seven chapters, you learn how to generate complex pivot reports complete with drill-down capabilities and accompanying charts. Then, you go even further, discovering how to build a comprehensive, dynamic pivot table reporting system for any business task or function. Learning advanced pivot table and pivot chart techniques for Excel 2013 or the newest Office 365 has never been easier. You'll find simple, step-by-step instructions, real-world case studies, even complete, easy recipes for solving your most common business analysis problems. *  Create, customize, and change your pivot tables and pivot charts *  Transform gigantic data sets into crystal-clear summary reports *  Summarize and analyze data even faster with new Excel 2013 recommended pivot tables *  Instantly highlight your most (and least) profitable customers, products, or regions *  Quickly filter pivot tables using slicers *  Use dynamic dashboards using Power View to see exactly where your business stands right now *  Revamp analyses on the fly by simply dragging and dropping fields *  Build dynamic self-service reporting systems your entire team can use *  Use PowerPivot or the Data Model to create pivot tables from multiple data sources and worksheets *  Work with and analyze OLAP data, and much more About MrExcel Library:  Every book in the MrExcel Library pinpoints a specific set of crucial Excel tasks and presents focused skills and examples for performing them rapidly and effectively. Selected by Bill Jelen, Microsoft Excel MVP and mastermind behind the leading Excel solutions website MrExcel.com, these  books will *  Dramatically increase your productivity-saving you 50 hours a year or more *  Present proven, creative strategies for solving real-world problems *  Show you how to get great results, no matter how much data you have *  Help you avoid critical mistakes that even experienced users make CATEGORY: Spreadsheets COVERS: Microsoft Office Excel 2013Introduction  Chapter 1 Pivot Table Fundamentals  What Is a Pivot Table?  Why Should You Use a Pivot Table?  When Should You Use a Pivot Table?  The Anatomy of a Pivot Table  Values Area  Rows Area  Columns Area  Filters Area  Pivot Tables Behind the Scenes  Limitations of Pivot Table Reports  A Word About Compatibility  Next Steps  Chapter 2 Creating a Basic Pivot Table  Ensure Your Data Is in a Tabular Layout  Avoid Storing Data in Section Headings  Avoid Repeating Groups as Columns  Eliminate Gaps and Blank Cells in Your Data Source  Apply Appropriate Type Formatting to Your Fields  Summary of Good Data Source Design  Creating a Basic Pivot Table  Adding Fields to the Report  Adding Layers to Your Pivot Table  Rearranging Your Pivot Table  Creating a Report Filter  Understanding the Recommended PivotTables Feature  Using Slicers  Creating a Standard Slicer  Creating a Timeline Slicer  Keeping Up with Changes in Your Data Source  Changes Have Been Made to Your Existing Data Source  Your Data Source's Range Has Been Expanded with the Addition of Rows or Columns  Sharing the Pivot Cache  Saving Time with New Pivot Table Tools  Deferring Layout Updates  Starting Over with One Click  Relocating Your Pivot Table  Next Steps  Chapter 3 Customizing a Pivot Table  Making Common Cosmetic Changes  Applying a Table Style to Restore Gridlines  Changing the Number Format to Add Thousands Separators  Replacing Blanks with Zeros  Changing a Field Name  Making Report Layout Changes  Using the New Compact Layout  Using the Outline Form Layout  Using the Traditional Tabular Layout  Controlling Blank Lines, Grand Totals, and Other Settings  Customizing the Pivot Table Appearance with Styles and Themes  Customizing a Style  Modifying Styles with Document Themes  Changing Summary Calculations  Understanding Why One Blank Cell Causes a Count  Using Functions Other Than Count or Sum  Adding and Removing Subtotals  Suppress Subtotals When You Have Many Row Fields  Adding Multiple Subtotals for One Field  Changing the Calculation in a Value Field  Showing Percentage of Total  Using % Of to Compare One Line to Another Line  Showing Rank  Tracking Running Total and Percent of Running Total  Display Change from a Previous Field  Tracking Percent of Parent Item  Track Relative Importance with the Index Option  Next Steps  Chapter 4 Grouping, Sorting, and Filtering Pivot Data  Grouping Pivot Fields  Grouping Date Fields  Including Years When Grouping by Months  Grouping Date Fields by Week  Ungrouping  Grouping Numeric Fields  Using the PivotTable Fields List  Docking and Undocking the PivotTable Fields List  Rearranging the PivotTable Fields List  Using the Areas Section Drop-Downs  Sorting in a Pivot Table  Sorting Customers into High-to-Low Sequence Based on Revenue  Using a Manual Sort Sequence  Using a Custom List for Sorting  Filtering the Pivot Table: An Overview  Using Filters for Row and Column Fields  Filtering Using the Check Boxes  Filtering Using the Search Box  Filtering Using the Label Filters  Filtering a Label Column Using Information in a Values Column  Creating a Top-Five Report Using the Top 10 Filter  Filtering Using the Date Filters in the Label Drop-Down  Filtering Using the Filters Area  Adding Fields to the Filters Area  Choosing One Item from a Filter  Choosing Multiple Items from a Report Filter  Replicating a Pivot Table Report for Each Item in a Filter  Filtering Using Slicers and Timelines  Using Timelines to Filter by Date  Driving Multiple Pivot Tables from One Set of Slicers  Next Steps  Chapter 5 Performing Calculations Within Your Pivot Tables  Introducing Calculated Fields and Calculated Items  Method 1: Manually Add the Calculated Field to Your Data Source  Method 2: Use a Formula Outside Your Pivot Table to Create the Calculated Field5  Method 3: Insert a Calculated Field Directly into Your Pivot Table  Creating Your First Calculated Field  Creating Your First Calculated Item  Understanding the Rules and Shortcomings of Pivot Table Calculations  Remembering the Order of Operator Precedence  Using Cell References and Named Ranges  Using Worksheet Functions  Using Constants  Referencing Totals  Rules Specific to Calculated Fields  Rules Specific to Calculated Items  Managing and Maintaining Your Pivot Table Calculations  Editing and Deleting Your Pivot Table Calculations  Changing the Solve Order of Your Calculated Items  Documenting Your Formulas  What's Next  Chapter 6 Using Pivot Charts and Other Visualizations  What Is a Pivot Chart...Really?  Creating Your First Pivot Chart  Keeping Pivot Chart Rules in Mind  Changes in the Underlying Pivot Table Affect Your Pivot Chart  The Placement of Data Fields in Your Pivot Table Might Not Be Best Suited for Your Pivot Chart  A Few Formatting Limitations Still Exist in Excel 2013  Examining Alternatives to Using Pivot Charts  Method 1: Turn Your Pivot Table into Hard Values  Method 2: Delete the Underlying Pivot Table  Method 3: Distribute a Picture of the Pivot Chart  Method 4: Use Cells Linked Back to the Pivot Table as the Source Data for Your Chart  Using Conditional Formatting with Pivot Tables  Creating Custom Conditional Formatting Rules  What's Next  Chapter 7 Analyzing Disparate Data Sources with Pivot Tables  Using Multiple Consolidation Ranges  Creating a Multiple Consolidation Pivot Table  Analyzing the Anatomy of a Multiple Consolidation Ranges Pivot Table  The Row Field  The Column Field  The Value Field  The Page Fields  Using the Internal Data Model  Building Out Your First Data Model  Managing Relationships in the Data Model  Adding a New Table to the Data Model  Removing a Table from the Data Model  Create a New Pivot Table Using the Data Model  Limitations of the Internal Data Model  Building a Pivot Table Using External Data Sources  Building a Pivot Table with Microsoft Access Data  Building a Pivot Table with SQL Server Data  What's Next  Chapter 8 Sharing Pivot Tables with Others  Designing a Workbook as an Interactive Web Page  Sharing a Link to Your Web Workbook  Embedding Your Workbook in a Blog Post or Your Web Page  Sharing Pivot Tables with Other Versions of Office  Chapter 9 Working with and Analyzing OLAP Data  What Is OLAP?  Connecting to an OLAP Cube  Understanding the Structure of an OLAP Cube  Understanding the Limitations of OLAP Pivot Tables  Creating Offline Cubes  Breaking Out of the Pivot Table Mold with Cube Functions  Adding Calculations to Your OLAP Pivot Tables  Creating Calculated Measures  Creating Calculated Members  Managing Your OLAP Calculations  Performing What-If Analysis with OLAP Data  Next Steps  Chapter 10 Mashing Up Data with PowerPivot  Understanding the Benefits and Drawbacks of PowerPivot and the Data Model  Merge Data from Multiple Tables Without Using VLOOKUP  Import 100 Million Rows into Your Workbook  Create Better Calculations Using the DAX Formula Language  Other Benefits of the PowerPivot Data Model in All Editions of Excel  Benefits of the Full PowerPivot Add-In with Excel Pro Plus  Understanding the Limitations of the Data Model  Joining Multiple Tables Using the Data Model in Regular Excel 2013  Preparing Data for Use in the Data Model  Adding the First Table to the Data Model  Adding the Second Table and Defining a Relationship  Tell Me Again-Why Is This Better Than Doing a VLOOKUP?  Using QuickExplore  Creating a New Pivot Table from an Existing Data Model  Getting a Distinct Count  Using the PowerPivot Add-In from Excel 2013 Pro Plus  Enabling PowerPivot  Import a Text File  Add Excel Data by Copying and Pasting  Add Excel Data by Linking  Define Relationships  Add Calculated Columns Using DAX  Build a Pivot Table  Understanding Differences Between PowerPivot and Regular Pivot Tables  Two Kinds of DAX Calculations  DAX Calculations for Calculated Columns  Using RELATED() to Base a Column Calculation on Another Table  Using DAX to Create a Calculated Field in the Pivot Table  DAX Calculated Fields Implicitly Respect the Filters  Define a DAX Calculated Field  Is Unfilter Even a Word?  CALCULATE Is a Super-Enhanced Version of SUMIFS  Adding Fields to the Values Area Generates DAX Calculated Fields  Using a Calendar Table to Enable Time Intelligence Functions  Adding the Data to PowerPivot and Formatting It  PowerPivot Doesn't Automatically Sort by Custom Lists  Create a PivotTable and Marvel at the Results  This Is a Discussion About Time Intelligence  Using Key Performance Indicators  Setting up a KPI Compared to an Absolute Value  Setting Up a KPI Compared to a Calculated Target Value  Other Notes About PowerPivot  Combination Layouts  Getting Your Data into PowerPivot with SQL Server  Other Issues  Next Steps  Chapter 11 Dashboarding with Power View  Preparing Your Data for Power View  Creating a Power View Dashboard  Every New Dashboard Element Starts as a Table  Subtlety Should Be Power View's Middle Name  Convert the Table to a Chart  Add Drill-Down to a Chart  To Begin a New Element, Drag a Field to a Blank Spot on the Canvas  Every Chart Point Is a Filter for Every Other Element  Adding a Real Slicer  The Filter Pane Can Be Confusing  Use Tile Boxes to Filter One or a Group of Charts  Replicating Charts Using Multiples  Showing Data on a Map  Using Table or Card View with Images  Changing the Calculation  Animating a Scatter Chart Over Time  Some Closing Tips on Power View  Animating Pivot Table Data on a Map  Next Steps  Chapter 12 Enhancing Your Pivot Table Reports with Macros  Why Use Macros with Your Pivot Table Reports?  Recording Your First Macro  Creating a User Interface with Form Controls  Altering a Recorded Macro to Add Functionality  What's Next  Chapter 13 Using VBA to Create Pivot Tables  Enabling VBA in Your Copy of Excel  Using a File Format That Enables Macros  Visual Basic Editor  Visual Basic Tools  The Macro Recorder  Understanding Object-Oriented Code  Learning Tricks of the Trade  Writing Code to Handle Any Size Data Range  Using Super-Variables: Object Variables  Using With and End With to Shorten Code  Understanding Versions  Code for New Features Won't Work in Previous Versions  Building a Pivot Table in Excel VBA  Adding Fields to the Data Area  Formatting the Pivot Table  Dealing with Limitations of Pivot Tables  Filling Blank Cells in the Data Area  Filling Blank Cells in the Row Area  Learning Why You Cannot Affect a Pivot Table by Inserting or Deleting Cells  Controlling Totals  Determining the Size of a Finished Pivot Table to Convert It to Values  Pivot Table 201: Creating a Report Showing Revenue by Category  Ensuring Table Layout Is Utilized  Rolling Daily Dates Up to Years  Eliminating Blank Cells  Controlling the Sort Order with AutoSort  Changing the Default Number Format  Suppressing Subtotals for Multiple Row Fields  Copying a Finished Pivot Table as Values to a New Workbook  Handling Final Formatting  Adding Subtotals to Get Page Breaks  Putting It All Together  Calculating with a Pivot Table  Addressing Issues with Two or More Data Fields  Using Calculations Other Than Sum  Calculated Data Fields  Calculated Items  Calculating Groups  Using Show Values As to Perform Other Calculations  Using Advanced Pivot Table Techniques  Using AutoShow to Produce Executive Overviews  Using ShowDetail to Filter a Recordset  Creating Reports for Each Region or Model  Manually Filtering Two or More Items in a PivotField  Using the Conceptual Filters  Using the Search Filter  Setting up Slicers to Filter a Pivot Table  Using the Data Model in Excel 2013  Add Both Tables to the Data Model  Create a Relationship Between the Two Tables  Define the Pivot Cache and Build the Pivot Table  Add Model Fields to the Pivot Table  Add Numeric Fields to the Values Area  Putting It All Together  Next Steps  Chapter 14 Advanced Pivot Table Tips and Techniques  Tip 1: Force Pivot Tables to Refresh Automatically  Tip 2: Refresh All Pivot Tables in a Workbook at the Same Time  Tip 3: Sort Data Items in a Unique Order Not Ascending or Descending  Tip 4: Turn Pivot Tables into Hard Data  Tip 5: Fill the Empty Cells Left by Row Fields  Option 1: Implement the Repeat All Data Items Feature  Option 2: Use Excel's Go To Special Functionality  Tip 6: Add a Rank Number Field to Your Pivot Table  Tip 7: Reduce the Size of Your Pivot Table Reports  Delete Your Source Data Tab  Tip 8: Create an Automatically Expanding Data Range  Tip 9: Compare Tables Using a Pivot Table  Tip 10: AutoFilter a Pivot Table  Tip 11: Transpose a Data Set with a Pivot Table  Step 1: Combine All Non-Column-Oriented Fields into One Dimension Field  Step 2: Create a Multiple Consolidation Ranges Pivot Table  Step 3: Double-Click the Grand Total Intersection of Row and Column  Step 4: Parse Your Dimension Column into Separate Fields  Tip 12: Force Two Number Formats in a Pivot Table  Tip 13: Create a Frequency Distribution with a Pivot Table  Tip 14: Use a Pivot Table to Explode a Data Set to Different Tabs  Tip 15: Use a Pivot Table to Explode a Data Set to Different Workbooks  What's Next  Chapter 15 Dr. Jekyll and Mr. GetPivotData  Turning Off the Evil GetPivotData Problem  Preventing GetPivotData by Typing the Formula  GetPivotData Is Surely Evil-Turn It Off  Why Did Microsoft Force GetPivotData on Us?  Using GetPivotData to Solve Pivot Table Annoyances  Build an Ugly Pivot Table  Build the Shell Report  Using GetPivotData to Populate the Shell Report  Updating the Report in Future Months  9780789748751  TOC  12/18/2013
                            
                        Szczegóły
Tytuł
                                        Excel 2013 Pivot Table Data Crunching
                                    
                                                                                                            Autor                                                                                                    
                                                
                                            
                                                                                                                                                                        Wydawnictwo                                                                                                                                                            
                                                
                                                                                                                                                                        Que Corporation
                                                                                                                                                                                                                    
                                            Rok wydania
                                            2013
                                        Oprawa
                                            Miękka
                                        Ilość stron
                                            432
                                        ISBN
                                            9780789748751
                                        EAN
                                            9780789748751
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                            Excel 2013 Pivot Table Data Crunching
                        
                    
                                            
                    
                    
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