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Could you please explain the QVD file interview point of way?

Any body help me

5 Replies
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Author

Hi Ramesh,

Interview point of view ?? .. Hmm .. well, I would say , Know more about qvd, love it. Then interviewer loves you back.

QVD .. Qlikview data files is a local format / qlikview's local format to save data.

Beauty of QVD is one of the secret sauces of Qlikvew.

We can pull data from any relational or irrelational databases , you must be knowing this.

Using qlikview we can pull data even from Excell sheets and from many data sources.

After pulling data from database using preceding load, we apply transformations etc., to it and we store those as a QVD file.

Then we drop or delete the preceding load and import the QVD file into qlikview.

Since QVD has a great algorithm to compress data , pulling data from it is real fast and reports can be generated dynamically with no lagging.

If there is any lagging , you need to see How Optimized The QVD is .. and also many other things you need to consider.

I just gave you an over view of what QVD is ..

You need to know Binary load, Incremental load, auto incremental load, auto appending the data etc ..

Do some R and D , it will help you for sure.

Have a happy week ahead.

Regards,

Kumar.

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Author

Please read the "Help" on QVD files topics. This will cover all the information you need.

QVD Files

A QVD (QlikView Data) file is a file containing a table of data exported from QlikView. QVD is a native QlikView format and can only be written to and read by QlikView. The file format is optimized for speed when reading data from a QlikView script but it is still very compact. Reading data from a QVD file is typically 10-100 times faster than reading from other data sources.

QVD files can be read in two modes: standard (fast) and optimized (faster). The selected mode is determined automatically by the QlikView script engine. Optimized mode can be utilized only when all loaded fields are read without any transformations (formulas acting upon the fields), though the renaming of fields is allowed. A WHERE clause causing QlikView to unpack the records will also disable the optimized load.

A QVD file holds exactly one data table and consists of three parts:

  1. A well formed XML header (in UTF-8 char set) describing the fields in the table, the layout of the subsequent information and some other meta-data.
  2. Symbol tables in a byte stuffed format.
  3. Actual table data in a bit-stuffed format.

Purpose of QVD Files

QVD files can be used for many purposes. At least four major uses can be easily identified. More than one may apply in any given situation:

Increasing Load Speed

By buffering non-changing or slowly changing blocks of input data in QVD files, script execution becomes considerably faster for large data sets.

Decreasing Load on Database Servers

The amount of data fetched from external data sources can also be greatly reduced. This reduces work load on external databases and network traffic. Furthermore, when several QlikView scripts share the same data it is only necessary to load it once from the source database into a QVD file. The other applications can make use of the same data via this QVD file.

Consolidating Data from Multiple QlikView Applications

With the Binary script statement it is possible to load data from only one single QlikView application into another one, but with QVD files a QlikView script can combine data from any number of QlikView applications. This opens up possibilities e.g. for applications consolidating similar data from different business units etc.

Incremental Load

In many common cases the QVD functionality can be used for facilitating incremental load, i.e. exclusively loading new records from a growing database.

To learn more about the use of QVD files and Incremental Load, follow the link below:

Using QVD Files for Incremental Load

Create QVD Files

A QVD file can be created by one of three different methods:

  1. Explicit creation and naming using the Store command in the QlikView script. Simply state in the script that a previously read table or part thereof is to be exported to an explicitly named file at a location of your choice.
  2. Automatic creation and maintenance from script. By preceding a load or select statement with the Buffer prefix, QlikView will automatically create a QVD file which under certain conditions can be used instead of the original data source when reloading data.
  3. Explicit, manual creation and naming from layout or via Internal Macro Interpreter. Data can be exported from the QlikView layout via GUI commands or Automation macros. In the GUI you will find QVD as one of the possible export formats under the Export... command, found on the object menu of most sheet objects.

There is no difference between the resulting QVD files, e.g. with regard to reading speed etc. 

Reading Data from QVD Files

A QVD file can be read into or accessed by QlikView by the following methods:

  1. Loading a QVD file as an explicit data source. QVD files can be referenced by a load statement in the QlikView script just like any other type of text files (csv, fix, dif, biff etc). The File Wizard: Type handles QVD files by the same principles.

    Examples:

    load * from xyz.qvd (qvd);

    load Name, RegNo from xyz.qvd (qvd);

    load Name as a, RegNo as b from xyz.qvd (qvd);

  2. Automatic loading of buffered QVD files. When using the Buffer prefix on load or select statements, no explicit statements for reading are necessary. QlikView will determine the extent to which it will use data from the QVD file as opposed to acquiring data via the original load or select statement.
  3. Accessing QVD files via the script. A number of script functions (all beginning with qvd) can be used for retrieving various information on the data found in the XML header of a QVD file. These functions are presented under the File Functions in Script functions.
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Author

Thanks dathu sir.

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Thank you Sir.

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Hi

QVDs are qlikview data files which is a local format / qlikview's local format to save data into and is saved as a file on your network or place of your choosing.