Fabric Toolbox: DAX Performance Testing

Power BI
LLMs Are Getting Better at SQL
Refreshing hidden tables in Power BI semantic models with Fabric Data Pipelines
Introducing fabric-cicd Deployment Tool | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Streamline Data Engineering & Data Science with Copilot in Fabric | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Tabular Editor 3: February 2025 Release – Tabular Editor Blog
Dynamically change all Measures in a folder
Enhancing SQL database in Fabric: share your feedback and shape the future | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Admin API updates and upcoming definition changes  | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Using Error Bars to Visualize Targets in Power BI
Account receivable aging in Power BI - SQLBI
What’s new in OneLake catalog: Data governance and more | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Announcing the launch of Fabric Catalyst: empowering partners with scalable knowledge and best practices | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Build a python app with Fabric API for GraphQL | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
New improvements coming to the AI Skill | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Structure Fabric items by applying naming conventions
How to Use User-Defined Functions and User-Defined Types in Canvas Apps - Microsoft Dynamics 365 CRM Tips and Tricks
What’s new in Power Apps: January 2025 Feature Update - Microsoft Power Platform Blog
Data Auditing in Power BI - DataChant
Using pie charts is not the end of the world - SQLBI
you might also use pie or doughnut charts to highlight important categories to direct attention or tell a narrative. For instance, highlighting that global online sales are higher than regional sales for each other country, combined.
This use of color emphasizes how online sales make up more sales than any individual store, combined. We could show the same thing in a bar chart, but it takes up more space and might be less effective.
The previous example also highlights why “data storytelling” does not easily apply to most Power BI reports. You can craft a data story with your visuals, but ultimately, the user is the storyteller.
It is easy to show a screenshot that looks nice, but it is another thing entirely for the report to remain useful after interaction. We will leave that discussion for another, future article.
Despite the bad reputation of pie charts among data or design professionals, many people often still opt for pie charts in their reports for various reasons, like the following:
Familiarity
Space
The biggest problems with pie and doughnut charts are accuracy and precision. While it is easy to quickly identify the biggest and smallest slices, it becomes more difficult with more than three categories or when slices are similar in size.
Typically, when you have more categories, you focus on the top few and group the rest into “others” in a single slice. In Power BI you can do static grouping and binning, but unfortunately, the dynamic “TopN and others” pattern is typically too complex for the average user to implement or maintain.
If you need a deep guide specifically about color in data visualization, then we recommend this article on Datawrapper by Lisa Muth (which is tool-agnostic).
If the purpose of the chart is to evaluate magnitude and compare categories, then a pie chart is not a good option. You generally opt for pie or doughnut charts and other part-of-whole visuals when your focus is on answering data questions about proportionality.
Note that if you are truly interested in the evolution of proportionality over time, you might also consider a stacked area chart or 100% stacked area chart, too (although stacked bars work with discrete data like yearly trends).
BULK INSERT in Fabric Data Warehouse (Preview) | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Fabric OPENROWSET function (Preview) | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric
Behind the Scenes: How I Automated My Fabric Workshop (training)
Data Workspace is Now Generally Available! - Microsoft Power Platform Blog
Differences between ALL and ALLCROSSFILTERED - SQLBI
Unlock new possibilities by customizing Copilot chat in your apps with Copilot Studio (Preview) - Microsoft Power Platform Blog
User defined functions, user defined types, and enhanced component properties move forward - Microsoft Power Platform Blog
Introducing the plan designer in Power Apps (preview) - Microsoft Power Platform Blog
Take over Ownership in Microsoft Fabric
service principal take ownership, as documented in the limitations. So the ideal solution is not
Private Preview of Migration assistant for Fabric Data Warehouse | Microsoft Fabric Blog | Microsoft Fabric