Lesson 4.3 – Filtering Data Filtering allows you to display only the rows that match specific criteria while temporarily hiding the rest. It is one of the most useful tools in Excel for exploring, cleaning, and analyzing data without modifying or deleting anything. 1. What Is Filtering? Filtering helps you focus on the information you need by showing only the rows that meet your conditions. You can filter text, numbers, dates, and even colors. Examples: Show only “Electronics” products Display sales greater than 500 Show dates from the last 30 days Filter rows with a specific color 2. How to Apply a Filter Method 1 – Using the Ribbon: Select your dataset. Go to Home → Sort & Filter → Filter . Filter arrows will appear on each column header. Method 2 – Using a Table: If your data is formatted as an Excel Table, filters are automatically enabled. 3. Filtering Text Text filters allow you to show rows that match specif...
Chapter 7: JOIN Operations Combining data from multiple tables is at the heart of relational database power. JOIN operations let you model real-world relationships—customers and orders, employees and managers, products and suppliers—and extract insights that single tables alone can’t provide. In this chapter, you’ll learn how each JOIN type works, see practical examples, and discover performance tips to keep your queries fast and your results accurate. Why JOIN Operations Matter In a normalized schema, related entities live in separate tables to avoid redundancy: Customers hold personal details. Orders record purchase transactions. Products list inventory items. JOINs enable you to merge these tables in a single query, pushing the heavy lifting into the database engine. This approach ensures: Data Integrity: Foreign keys and JOINs guarantee valid relationships. Maintainability: Business logic stays in SQL, not scattered across application code. Performance: Set-based joins ...