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Tag Archives: SSRS 2016

SSRS 2016 Book Nearly Done… My Brain is now Jell-O

July 19, 2016 by Paul Turley

6

(first excerpt from the upcoming book)

“Professional SQL Server 2016 Reporting Services and Mobile Reports” from Wrox Press is content complete!  The book is well into the editing stage– still, another grueling phase of the publishing process, but there is light at the end of the proverbial tunnel.  What is it like to write an 800+ page technical book?  I’ve been trying to come up with the best metaphor to describe a year of persistent weekend-and-evening content development – building labs, demonstrations and exercises; performing research and and hounding my friends on the product team.  A big thanks thanks to Chris Finlan, Riccardo Muti and Robert Bruckner on the SSRS product team for their continued help and support.

I’ve admittedly been a bit quiet on the community front for a while I’ve been heads-down on this book project but I hope to start redirecting more energy to community content.

Intense book writing can be a life-sucker:

Image result for pricess bride torture

This is Paul’s brain…
…this is Paul’s brain after writing a technical book:

Image result for brain jello

Don’t get me wrong – I enjoy book writing.  I’ve spent a lot of my career writing technical books and courseware because I enjoy the challenge.  Writing helps me see things from different perspectives and at different levels of depth and difficulty for different audiences.

Give my brain a couple of weeks to heal and I’ll channel some of that energy into blogging and producing more community-facing training content.

So, what’s in the book?  This is the Fifth Edition of the Wrox Professional SQL Server Reporting Services series which I’ve been leading and co-authoring since 2003.  Amazon still has a working title listed but this is normal.  As a next-edition, some of the 2012 edition evolved forward but most of the book is all new material.  Four chapters are dedicated to the new Mobile Report features introduced in SSRS 2016.  Before someone asks… when will the book be out?  I don’t know exactly; there’s still work to be done.  Soon.  How’s that?

Over the next few weeks, I’ll post excerpts from the book to give you a taste of what’s coming and provide some valuable information about SSRS 2016.

Here’s a short except from Chapter 2:
What’s New in SQL Server 2016 Reporting Services?

Reporting Services was released as an add-in tool for SQL Server 2000 back in early 2004. At the time, the feature set was light by comparison to the product today but the foundational architecture was hasn’t changed significantly. Essential features included basic charts, sub-reports data regions and single-value textboxes.

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The second release in 2005 added a self-service report authoring tool called Report Builder (later named Report Builder 1.0) paired with a semantic modelling tool in the designer. The original modelling and ad hoc report tool has since been deprecated but it inspired more capable replacement technologies like Power Pivot and the later generations of Report Builder. Not to be confused with the original Report Builder tool, Report Builder 2.0 and 3.0 produce report definition files compatible with the report project tools that are integrated with Visual Studio; originally called Business Intelligence Development Studio (or “BIDS”).

Report Builder and Designer Enhancements

The report design experience for standard “paginated” reports hasn’t really changed much over the past few product versions but there have been incremental improvements. Report Builder is restyled to conform to Office 2016 standards. The installation process for Report Builder changes to an “Evergreen” app. This means that Microsoft maintains updates for frequent download, rather than the old “ClickOnce” installation from your on-prem server. Similar to prior versions, users can elect to install Report Builder from the Report Portal menu.  Report Builder is updated with a modern look-and-feel, simple and sleek, Changes are mostly cosmetic while the fundamental features are the same.

The Visual Studio integrated Report Designer is now part of SQL Server Data Tools (SSDT), a downloadable add-in for Visual Studio. Although the tool set hasn’t changed significantly, there are some subtle changes to the way SSDT is installed and the way updates are delivered. First of all, confusion about the name “SSDT” is dispelled because the former “SSDT” (the previous version add-in for database projects) and “SSDT for BI” (the previous version add-in for SSIS, SSAS and SSRS projects) are now a combined package, simply called SSDT. Secondly, you can simply download and install a version of SSDT that will work with the current version of Visual Studio or a few versions back. The SSDT add-in will be updated frequently and you will have the option to install updates on-demand from within Visual Studio.

Modern Browser Rendering

One of the most significant product improvements in 2016 may be one of the least apparent under casual observation. The entire HTML rendering engine has been completely overhauled across the platform. The report portal, used to navigate and manage report content, and the actual report content are rendered to modern HTML 5 standards, which are supported by all modern web browsers. The shift to modern HTML output means that web content produced by Reporting Services is consistently consumable on any device, regardless of the operating system or web browser, so long as it supports modern standards. The benefits are readily apparent when reports simply work on smartphones of any type, on tablets and laptop and desktop machines; regardless of the brand or operating system.

Parameter Layout Control

You will have improved control over parameter formatting and placement.  Since the inception of Reporting Services about twelve years ago, parameters have always been arbitrarily arranged in a narrow bar at the top of the browser window, from left-to-right, and then top-down.  The report designer has a grid to manage the placement of parameters, in the parameter bar, in any configuration, within definable rows and columns.

image

Mobile Reports

The addition of mobile dashboards to the SSRS platform is based on the Datazen product acquisition from ComponentArt in 2015. Mobile reports are primarily designed to enable data interactivity in dashboard-style reports created by a mobile report developer. Managing this expectation is important because this tool is significantly different than conventional Reporting Services.

Mobile reports can be viewed in the browser but are optimized for phone and tablet devices through native, installed applications running on all the major mobile OS platforms.   They are not a replacement for high-fidelity paginated reports created with Reporting Services, or self-service analytics in Power BI; they serve an entirely different purpose.

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At first, the mobile dashboard experience may seem to be a simple drop-in of the Datazen product; but, it is apparent that some integration with the SSRS architecture has already taken place, and more adaptations are likely on the horizon. The first notable difference is the Datazen server is entirely replaced by the SQL Server report server, and queries are now managed as SSRS shared datasets.

KPIs

New Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) integrated with the new Report Portal are also based on the Datazen product acquisition.  These KPI visuals are created and managed entirely within the portal.  In additional to the standard traffic light style comparison of actual vs target values, KPIs can include a trend line or segment chart. The KPI is driven by data from one or more shared datasets that were created in the SSDT report designer. For ease and simplicity, any value of the KPI can be entered manually through the design page.

clip_image002[7]

Although they are visualized in the Report Portal, KPIs are delivered to mobile devices through the Power BI mobile applications on every popular device platform.

Native Printing Control

The previous printing capability in SSRS replied on an ActiveX control which was only supported on Windows desktops and in certain web browsers. Even in tightly controlled Windows server environments, system administrators would rescind ActiveX support and disallow report printing from the server. The modern printing solution uses the PDF renderer to printable output and then the Adobe document viewer to perform the actual printing

PowerPoint Rendering

Users have had the option to export and render report content to Excel for several SSRS versions. Output to Word was added in SQL Server 2008 and then both of these rendering options were improved and updated in the 2008 R2 version. Now a third Office application format will be supported with the introduction of PowerPoint document rendering.

Most report items and data regions are converted to individual image objects in the resulting PowerPoint sides with one side generated per report page. Additional slides are created based on the report content size and layout. Textboxes are created for titles and report text, which support some report actions and textbox properties.

Integrated and Improved Report Portal

A new Report Portal web interface is introduced to replace the Report Manager. Like Report Manager, the portal is an ASP.NET web application used to access, run and manage reports in the web browser. The new portal has a look-and-feel we are accustomed to seeing in other modern apps from Microsoft these days; with responsive design for constancy on different device form factors.  Report Portal will be the home for mobile reports, KPIs and paginated reports – the new name for RDL reports authored with Reporting Services.  In the future, we may see support for additional content types.

clip_image003

Report Portal supports in all modern web browser by emitting responsive HTML5 with adaptations for mobile devices and screen orientations.

New Charts and Visual Enhancements

With the addition of two new chart types, visualization improvements are inched forward in Reporting Services.  The new Sunburst and Treemap charts apply multi-level field groups visualized in both color and visual boundaries.

clip_image004[9]

New and updated report visuals are likely to be an area of focus for future Reporting Services enhancements, given the success of self-service BI tools like Power BI. The design interface is identical to existing chart types and the only real difference is that groups of rows are visualized in these unique formats. The Sunburst chart is also capable of consuming unbalanced hierarchies with slices generated for different levels only where data points exist.

Standardized, Modern Browser Rendering

At first, you may not notice significant changes from previous versions, but the HTML renderer has been completely overhauled and updated.  Now, reports are rendered to HTML 5 standards whereas, they should consistently maintain the same appearance and behavior in all modern browsers that support the HTML 5 standard such as Microsoft Edge, IE 11, and newer versions of Google Chrome, Safari and Firefox.  This change is a welcome improvement which should clear up many problems with inconsistent and quirky report layouts while using different web browsers and devices.  By the same token, the change means there is no specific backward-compatibility for outdated browsers; consequently, reports that may have worked (or partially worked) in an old version of Internet Explorer may no longer work until the user upgrades.

Power BI Dashboard Pinning

For organizations who have invested in the Power BI cloud service, the Power BI integration feature allows users to pin graphical SSRS report visuals to their online dashboards.  In order to use this feature, an administrator must register the report server with an existing Power BI subscription, and a report user must have access to the Power BI subscription.

Reporting Services Configuration Manager  includes a new page to manage Power BI Integration.  This is where you register the report server instance with the Power BI subscription.  When a report with “pinnable” items (such as images, charts and gauges) is viewed in Report Portal, the Power BI icon is displayed on the toolbar.

clip_image006

“pinnable” items are highlighted in Report Portal. When a visual is selected, you are prompted to select a Power BI dashboard and the refresh frequency.  This schedules an Agent job on the report server to push updated visuals to the dashboard at the selected frequency.

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The Select frequency of updates option utilizes the SSRS subscription architecture by scheduling a SQL Server Agent job on the database server with the report server catalog. The Agent job re-queries the report data and then a report server component refreshes the Power BI dashboard tile with an updated report visual.

Pinned report visuals appear on the dashboard alongside the Power BI report and Excel visuals.  Clicking on one of these visuals will drill-through to the report back on the on-premises report server.  This gives users a seamless navigation experience between cloud-hosted Power BI content and selected report visual elements on your own report server.

clip_image009

The integrated Power BI experience is a big step forward in providing a completely integrated IT-hosted and self-service reporting, BI and analytics solution.

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Posted in BI Industry, DataZen, MVP Community, SolidQ, SQL Server, SQL Server Pro Magazine, SQL Syndication, SQLServerPedia, SSRS Administration, SSRS Design. Tagged Datazen, Mobile Reports, Reporting Services 2016, SSRS 2016

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" & Workspace and Database Recovery Techniques Aaron Nelson Ad-hoc reporting Add columns Add controls Albert Ferrari Alternate row colors Analysis Services Operations Guide Apple Are There Rules for Tabular Model Design? Article Assemblies Azure Azure Reporting Azure SQL Database BARC Survey best practices BI BI Center of Excellence BI COE BI Conference Bill Gates Birds-of-a-Feather BI Roles and Team Composition BISM BI Survey 10 Blogging Breakcrumb links Browser settings Build career Business Intelligence Business Intelligence for Visual Studio 2012 Business scorecard Can I Use Reporting Services with Tabular & PowerPivot Models? Checkbox in report Checkbox list Check mark Chris Webb Cloud computing Column chart Community Conditional formatting Conference presentation Conference review Conference session Conference Session Topics Cortana Power BI Integration Custom code Custom coding reports Custom Functions Dashboard design Dashboard standards Database Lifecycle Management Data Modeling 101 for Tabular Models Data Quality Services Dataset filter nulls Datazen Datazen control selection Date parameters DAX DAX: Essential Concepts DAX: Some of the Most Interesting Functions DAX: Some of the Most Useful Functions DAX functions DAX reference DAX syntax Demo scenario Denali CTP3 DevTeach DLM Do I Write MDX or DAX Queries to Report on Tabular Data? Do We Need to Have SharePoint to Use Tabular Models? Drill-down Drill-through Drillthrough Dynamic column visibility Dynamics CRM Dynamics reporting Embedded formatting ENterprise SSAS Errors Estimating BI European PASS Filter by user Formula Firewall Funnel charts Garner Magic Quadrant Microsoft BI Getting Started with DAX Calculations Global Summit Live Feeds Greenbar report Grocery shopping demo Hans Rosling Happy Birthday Power BI Hide columns Hitachi Consulting How Do You Design a Tabular Model for a Large Volume of Data? How Do You Secure a Tabular Model? How to Deploy and Manage a Tabular Model SSAS Database How to Promote a Business-created PowerPivot Model to an IT-managed SSAS Tabular Model HTML text integrated mode Interview Interviews Isn’t a Tabular Model Just Another Name for a Cube? James Phillips Julie Koesmarno King of Spain KPI indicator Licensing Login prompt Manually starting subscription Map Visualization Marco RUsso Master-detail report Master Data Management MDM MDX datasets MDX queries Microsoft Architecture Journal Microsoft humour Microsoft MVP Microsoft news Mobile Reporting Mobile Reports MVP community MVP Deep Dives 2 MVPs support the community MVP Summit navigation Nested tables Null filter Olivier Matrat Olympia WA Oracle vs Microsoft in the movies Oregon SQL Saturday Parameter controls Parameterize Parameters PASS 2012 PASS BAC Blog Feed PASS community leaders PASS Conference PASS Global Summit 2012 PASS Keynotes PASS Summit PASS Summit 2017 PASS Summit 2018 PASS Summit Announcements Paul te Braak PDF image distortion dithering fonts PerformancePoint Pinal Dave Poll About Product Usage Poll Results Pop-up window; Java script Portland OR Power BI Administration Power BI Best Visuals Contest Power BI DAX Power BI Partner Showcase Power BI Premium Power BI Pro Power BI Training Power BI World Tour Power Pivot PowerPivot Power Pivot DAX Power Query Power Query Training Power View Power View multidimensional cubes Preparing Data for a Tabular Model Project Phoenix Recipes Redmond SQL Saturday Reed Jacobson Remove columns Repeating list Report controls report dependencies Report deployment Reporting Services 2016 Reporting Services Training Report navigation Report parameters Report recipe book Reports for MDX Return specific row Rob Collie DAX Book Robert Bruckner Scheduled Refresh Scripting Tabular Model Measures Self-service reporting Seth Bauer SharePoint SharePoint 2012 SharePoint integration Simplifying and Automating Tabular Model Design Tasks SolidQ SolidQ Journal Solid Quality Mentors Spatial queries; happy holidays; Merry Christmas SQLAuthority SQLCAT SQL Saturday SQL Saturday 446 SQL Saturday Portland Oregon SQL Server SQL Server 2012 Upgrade Guide SQL Server community SQL Server Data Tools – Business Intelligence for Visual Studio 2012 SQL Server Denali SQL Server Denali; Self-service reporting SQL Server Denali CTP3 SQL Server MVP SQL Server Optimization SQL Server Pro Magazine SQL Teach SSAS SSAS Performance Logger SSAS Tabular SSAS Tools BI Development Tools SSDT BI SSRS 2016 SSRS dynamic columns SSRS PowerShell SSRS version control standards Start subscription Steve Jobs StreamInsight Strip line style Subscription Survival Tips for Using the Tabular Model Design Environment Tabular DAX Tabular Model & " Tabular Model Common Errors and Remedies Tabular Model Design Tabular Model Design Checklist Tabular Modeling Tabular models Tabular report design TechEd TechEd 2011 Sessions TechSmith Snagit Pro themes Threshold line Top values Training clsses Unconference User-related report content User authentication User prompted to login Using DAX to Solve real-World Business Scenarios Vancouver BC Vern Rabe Visualisation Visualization Visual Report Design Volunteers Weather and Climate Web.Contents Web API What About Multidimensional – Will Tabular Replace It? What are the Naming Conventions for Tabular Model Objects? What Do You Teach Non-technical Business Users About PowerPivot and Tabular Models? What’s the Best Business User Tool for Browsing & Analyzing Business Data with Tabular Models? What’s the Best IT Tool for Reporting on Tabular Models? What’s the Difference Between Calculated Columns & Measures? What’s the Difference Between PowerPivot and Tabular Models? Why Tabular? Wrox book
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