[go: up one dir, main page]

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
118 views3 pages

Power Query Release Notes 2013

This document contains release notes for the October 2013 version of Microsoft Power Query Preview for Excel. It describes system requirements including supported operating systems and Office versions. It also lists several known issues with using Power Query including queries not refreshing after tables are renamed in the Excel Data Model, crashes when renaming queries while the Power Pivot window is open, and loading query failures if workbook sheets are protected.

Uploaded by

Eduardo Taka
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
118 views3 pages

Power Query Release Notes 2013

This document contains release notes for the October 2013 version of Microsoft Power Query Preview for Excel. It describes system requirements including supported operating systems and Office versions. It also lists several known issues with using Power Query including queries not refreshing after tables are renamed in the Excel Data Model, crashes when renaming queries while the Power Pivot window is open, and loading query failures if workbook sheets are protected.

Uploaded by

Eduardo Taka
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Microsoft Power Query Preview for Excel October 2013 Release Notes

This Release Notes document contains information about the October 2013 release of Microsoft
Power Query Preview for Excel (2.8.3443.101).
The document contains the following sections:
1. Introduction
2. System Requirements
3. Known Issues

1. Introduction
Microsoft Power Query for Excel is a new add-in that provides a seamless experience for data discovery,
data transformation, enrichment and sharing for Information Workers, BI professionals and other users.
With Power Query you can:

Identify the data you care about from the sources you work with (e.g. relational databases,
Excel, text and XML files, OData feeds, web pages, Hadoop HDFS, etc.).
Discover relevant data using the search capabilities within Excel.
Combine data from multiple, disparate data sources and shape it in order to prepare the data
for further analysis in tools like Excel and Power Pivot.
Share queries for collaboration with other users within your organization.

2. System requirements
In order to install Power Query, the following system requirements must be satisfied:

Operating System: The following Operating Systems are supported:


o Windows Vista (requires .NET 3.5 SP1)
o Windows Server 2008 (requires .NET 3.5 SP1)
o Windows Server 2008 R2
o Windows 7
o Windows 8
o Windows 8.1

Microsoft Office: The following Office versions are supported:


o Office 2010 SP1
o Office 2013 RTM

Internet Explorer: Internet Explorer 9 or greater is required.

Microsoft Power Query for Excel is available for 32-bit (x86) and 64-bit (x64) platforms, your selection
must match the bit-ness of the installed version of Office.

3. Known Issues
This section includes notes about some of the most commonly hit issues when trying to use Power
Query, such as:

Excel Data Model and Power Pivot interaction:


o Queries will not refresh after a table has been renamed in the Excel 2013 Data Model
(via Power Pivot) and modified in Power Query.
o Renaming a query and refreshing (through Power Query) while the Power Pivot Manage
window is open causes a crash in Power Pivot and Excel.
o For the query which is already loaded to Excel Data Model, modifying its command text
in the Connection properties to some specific SQL statement will unload it from data
model.
o Importing a Power Query query connection into Power Pivot in Excel 2013 using the
Existing Connections in Power Pivot will leave Excel and Power Query processes
running when trying to close Excel.

Other issues:
o Query Settings task pane and Query ribbon tab might not show automatically after
enabling connections on a workbook where connections were disabled.
o Loading a query for the first time fails if any worksheet in the workbook is protected.

1. Queries will not refresh after the resulting table has been renamed.
Renaming a table in the Data Model (i.e. using Power Pivot or Power View rename options) will make
subsequent refresh attempts fail.
The recommendation is to not rename resulting tables in the worksheet or Data Model until a fix for
these issues is available.

2. Renaming a query and refreshing (through Power Query) while the Power Pivot Manage window
is open causes a crash in Power Pivot and Excel
When trying to rename a query and refresh it via Power Query, while the Power Pivot Manage window is
open, a crash will happen in Power Pivot and Excel.
As a workaround, users can rename and refresh via Power Query before opening the Power Pivot
Manage window.

3. For the query which is already loaded to Excel Data Model, modifying its command text in the
Connection properties to some specific SQL statement will unload it from the Data Model.
Once a query has been loaded into the Excel Data Model, if the user modifies its command text in the
Data Connection properties to some specific SQL statement will unload the query from the Data Model.
It is recommended to not modify the Connection SQL statements for existing Power Query queries.

4. Importing a Power Query query connection into Power Pivot in Excel 2013 using the Existing
Connections in Power Pivot will leave Excel and Power Query processes running when trying to
close Excel.
If the user tries to import a Power Query query into Power Pivot in Excel 2013 using the Existing
Connections functionality in Power Pivot, there will be Excel and Power Query processes that will keep
running in the background when trying to close Excel.
5. Query Settings task pane and Query ribbon tab might not show automatically after enabling
connections on a workbook where connections were disabled.
When opening a workbook containing Power Query queries, Excel might disable the connections as a
security mechanism and offer an Enable Content button. After clicking this button, connections will be
successfully enabled but the Query Settings pane might not show up automatically.
The workaround is to change the currently selected cell after enabling connections. If this cell belongs to
a Power Query query loaded on the sheet, the Query Settings pane and Query ribbon tab will show at
this time.

6. Loading a query for the first time fails if any worksheet in the workbook is protected.
When trying to load a new query in an Excel workbook, an error will happen if any of the sheets in the
workbook is protected. As a workaround, please check that none of the existing sheets in the workbook
are protected, before adding a new Power Query query.

If you find any other issues while installing or using Power Query, please do not hesitate to contact the
Power Query UX Feedback alias.

You might also like