If you have Excel 2010/2013, go to the Power Query tab instead of the Data tab. Note: I’ll use Excel 2016, however, the steps are the same on previous Excel versions. Therefore, the first step is to import and append the information from these files. If you don’t have Power Query on your computer, you can download it from here: Power Query Download.Īs mentioned before, the data are contained in 20 text files. If you want to follow along, please download the files from this link. The desired goal is to be able to analyze the sales performance by year and region. Power Query is also known as ‘Get and Transform’ in Excel 2016.įor this post I’ll be using sales records with the following fields: Region, Product, Date, and Sales. To accomplish this, I’ll use two Excel tools: Power Pivot and Power Query. To make things more interesting, I’ll import data from 20 different text files (.csv) with 2.5 million records each. In this post I’ll debunk this myth by creating a PivotTable from 50 million records in Excel. Actually, the right myth should be that you can’t use more than 1,048,576 rows, since this is the number of rows on each sheet but even this one is false. A common myth I hear very frequently is that you can’t work with more than 1 million records in Excel.