![]() I have the ability to save or name this, right, it’s called. I could just double-click or drag and drop and start creating a dashboard, which is a combination of charts. Notice I see the available charts that I’ve already created. ![]() To introduce the concept of dashboards, here, I could click on new dashboard or dashboard. Okay, so very easy to use, right? Click menus or you can drive from the toolbars as well. Here if I wanted to build a different type of visualization, perhaps a pie chart example, and then drag and drop certain values, right? Dashboards There’s built in intelligence where the visual analytics will choose what type of visualization it thinks is helpful for those fields, but you can customize or change those as well. This is one example of comparison data visualization. I have different ways of sorting or customizing this view of this data set. Here I’m seeing a comparison of sales revenue per product category. Here I can drag and drop some revenue values per product. Let’s look at some examples, right, maybe a quick example is a comparison data visualization. Now I have the ability to drag and drop and build all types of data visualizations. My numerical fields and dimensions, pretty standard in a visual analytics tool. Right away I can see a separation of my data sets into measures. Here if I click on Connect to Data, I can point to an existing business intelligence data set. Or you’ll see the icon above, different data sets, and that would bring that data set into the visual analytics. Under visual analytics, new connected data will allow me to point to existing data sets. You really have unlimited features here in terms of variations and types of visualizations, but let’s look at a few examples. This introduces the concept of separating your data sets into dimensions and measures, and then the ability to build worksheets and dashboards and then perform analysis and tell a story through my data visualization. Inside Aqua Data Studio is a main menu and a floating window, right? Here you can see an example of some visual analytics files I have opened. ![]() Data import and export: Registering a server and connecting to a database enables you to import and export data, allowing you to move data between different databases or external sources, and perform data migration tasks.Įxplore how to register a server and connect to a database or data source in Aqua Data Studio.Welcome to an overview video.This helps you to better understand and optimize your database operations. Querying and analysis: By connecting Aqua Data Studio to a database, you can execute SQL queries, develop and debug SQL scripts, and analyze query performance. ![]() Connecting to a database allows you to use these features to analyze and visualize your data for better insights.
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