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When you're working in a lakehouse, you can create and add tables to a new Power BI semantic model. You also can adjust the tables shown in the default semantic model associated with a lakehouse. In either case, you might run into a scenario where you don't see all available tables and can't add them to your semantic model.
Status: Open
Product Experience: Data Engineering
When trying to select the tables to include in a semantic model, you don't see all expected tables.
No workarounds at this time. This article will be updated when the fix is released.
Events
Mar 31, 11 PM - Apr 2, 11 PM
The biggest Fabric, Power BI, and SQL learning event. March 31 – April 2. Use code FABINSIDER to save $400.
Register todayTraining
Module
Design a semantic model in Power BI - Training
The process of creating a complicated semantic model in Power BI is straightforward. If your data is coming in from more than one transactional system, before you know it, you can have dozens of tables that you have to work with. Building a great semantic model is about simplifying the disarray. A star schema is one way to simplify a semantic model, and you learn about the terminology and implementation of them in this module. You will also learn about why choosing the correct data granularity is important