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Hello @morganhouse ,
When you add multiple tables to PowerBI and you specify the cardinality then this means that you are creating a data model.
For experienced data engineers this is similar to creating a relational database model.
I think you should look for normalized and denormalized data model.
It explains the benefits and drawbacks for having a data model vs one table
https://medium.com/analytics-vidhya/database-normalization-vs-denormalization-a42d211dd891
Also, It always depends on the size of data that you will import to PowerBI
Thank you, @themistoklis .
I do understand the concept behind it. However, I have having trouble actually implementing it and wondering if and when I should.
I provided a (denormalized) table that I am working with. Would there be a beenfit to separating this table out into different tables? Obviously there are a lot of redundancies (Cost center, year, month, week ending date, etc...).
The next question is, if I did separate them out, would the main data set still need to be part of the PowerBI file?
I know this is a very low-level question and I do truly appreciate your willingness to take a look and to help.
Thank you again.
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