Congratulations! You are almost done building your business model! The last step is for you to define the business view for the model.
A business view is defined as
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A business category is just a named bucket for you to group and re-group your business columns in. They can mimic your business table names, or be named after your favorite rock stars. Categories do not have metadata associated with them, have no tie back to any business table (although our Editor will give you the impression this relationship exists - don't be fooled), and have the simple purpose of allowing you to bucket the business columns in your model as intuitively as possibly for your data consumers.
Today, categories are a single level entity. We hope in the future to support nested categories.
Building a business view consists of creating your categories, then moving your business columns from the business tables into the categories. You can move columns from different business tables into the same category, and even duplicate the same business column into two different categories.
The Editor Graph only represents the business tables portion of the business model, so we use the Tree Navigator and the Category Editor to create a business view.
Tree Navigator: Creating Categories
To create a new category using the Tree Navigator, first make sure that the model you want to add this category to is selected, and the Business View node is visible (lives under the business model name node).
- Right-click (or ALT-click) on the Business View branch in the Navigator Tree.
- Select the New Category... option from the popup menu.
- The *Category Properties" dialog displays.
Under Construction
Note that the dialog that you are presented with at this point leads you to believe that you can set metadata properties on a category. While technically possible, it makes no sense and is not going to be carried forward. So ignore the properties features of the Category Properties dialog, and just set a name.