Do not input private or sensitive data. View Qlik Privacy & Cookie Policy.
Skip to main content

Announcements
Join us in NYC Sept 4th for Qlik's AI Reality Tour! Register Now
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
Not applicable

pls give me answers for this basic questions ? pls...................

1)qvx,qvs

2)how qvd is compressing?

3) qlik iew with other bi ? why we need to take?

4)if we uncheck force 32bit what will happen

5)qlikview data structure

6) information density and subset ratio? What is the use of this?




pls help me


thanks in advance

3 Replies
albertovarela
Partner - Specialist
Partner - Specialist

I'd recommend you to look at the reference manual.

On Windows explorer go to> Folder and search options > View > Show hidden files, folders and drives

Then try: C:\ProgramData\QlikTech\QlikView Documentation\Reference Manual

anil2185
Contributor III
Contributor III

1. QVX (QlikView data eXchange) is a new file/stream format for high performance data input into

QlikView. A QVX formatted file contains metadata describing a table of data and the actual data. In

contrast to the QVD format, which is proprietary and optimized for minimum transformations inside

QlikView, the QVX format is public and requires a few transformations when exporting data from

traditional data base formats.

QVS - It can be an abbreviation for QlikView Server which is a service that publishes QlikView documents so that you can analyze data over Internet.

It can be a file extension "QlikView Script file" which is just a plain text file containing a QlikView script. You can create it from inside the script editor (File -> Export to script file) and you can use it using an include command (Insert -> Include statement).

ngulliver
Partner - Specialist III
Partner - Specialist III

Hi, Manoj.

For 3) are you asking for a comparison with other BI tools ? If so, there is another post currently active that would be worth following:

What is the difference between QlikView when compared to other BI tool

Regards,

Neil