How to show polygon data in Power BI
Revision as of 09:16, 14 December 2023 by Frank@tygron.nl (talk | contribs)
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How to show polygon data in Power BI:
- Open or create a Power BI project that has a web connection to Neighborhoods of a project session. See this How-to;
- Select the visuals tab in your Power BI Project
- Click on the triple dots icon named "Get More Visuals" and select the option "Get More Visuals".
- In the search field, type "Icon" and select the "Icon Maps" app.
- On the Icon Map app page, click on the "Add" button.
- Unfold the "Neighborhoods" data connection
- Find and drag the features.properties.NAME attribute to the Category field.
- Select a numerical property, such as feature.properties.ACTIVE and drag it to the Size field.
- The Icon Map should now show a map, but not yet the shapes of the neighborhoods.
- Select the "Format your visual" tab and unfold the GeoJSON section.
- Click on the Off button to activate it.
- Switch to the Tygron Client Application to a Neighborhood GeoJSON endpoint.
- Select Current Situation in the Ribbon bar
- Hover over Administrative and under Neighborhoods, select Export Geo Data.
- In the Export Geo Data panel, set the type to GeoJSON (MultiPolygons).
- Verify that the export CRS is set to 4326. If not, click on the edit link.
- In the CRS selection panel, type 4326 and press enter.
- Wait for the process to finish and select the WGS84 CRS with the number 4326 and confirm with select.
- Click on the Copy URL button next to GeoJSON endpoint.
- Switch back to Power BI and paste the link in the URL field in the GeoJSON we had previously activated. (Use CTRL-V)
Notes
- Instead of an Overlay ID number, you can also use the WMS background layers.
- To access a different timeframe for an Overlay, type the Overlay ID followed by a dash and then the timeframe number. For example: 14-3, 10-0 or 3-99.