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Worked Dimension Examples

Worked Dimension Examples

There's many ways to use dimensions and often more than one way to achieve the same goal. This can make it hard to know the best approach so we've detailed examples below to help give a steer on what might be the best methodology for your use case!

Nested vs Linked Dimensions

One way of defining a relationship between dimensions is to add multiple dimensions to the same variable and instead create a nested relationship.

Another is to link them together as explained here.

To illustrate the difference we have examples of a Vendor Template using both approaches.

Nested Approach

Here the Itemised Vendor dimension and Department dimension have no direct relationship and instead are both added to the Inputs where the user can define the inputs for each combination of dimension items. See model.

Linked Approach

Here the Itemised Vendor dimension and Department dimension have a direct linked relationship and each combination of items must have its own row from the primary Itemised Vendor dimension. See model.

Common Use Cases

  • Project Based Utilisation and Profitability

    Here the template shows how to build up a Project Based Utilisation and Profitability model by Project and Role using the Nested approach. See model.