My time dimension is years and periods and I have a subset called 2008 that holds the “Yr 2008†consolidation and all of it’s children.
So I have the consolidation “Yr 2008†and the subset “2008â€.
If a user creates an excel report that references the annual total and in error puts “2008†rather than “Yr 2008†the report will double count the result rather than generate a key error.
The reason I get a double count is that TM1 has in the background created a consolidation named "2008" that contains all the elements that the subset "2008" does. Since the subset contains the consolidation and all the children, the result is double counted.
This consolidation does not show up in the dimension and dimix on "2008" will return zero. If however I paste 2008 into the dimension I can see the consolidation in the subset editor.
I think this is a very bad piece of functionality....
It represents a massive loss in control in the way a dimension consolidates. If someone has rights to create a public subset then they can permanently add consolidations into the dimension, you would normally need the perspectives licence to do this.
They are mixing structural information about the way information should be displayed and the way information should be consolidated. The only references that should work as references for spreadsheets are elements that are explicitly set up in the dimension and not any random subsets names as well.
Given the tendency to create subsets with name that are very similar to element names the opportunity for confusion is massive.
There is already the “roll up†functionality in the subset editor that can be used to produce on the fly consolidations.
I know I can correct this by deleting and renaming subsets to something more obscure, but I have three systems to do this on and I have delete every single view that references one of these subsets. As the problem is in the period dimension this is going to be very very horrible....
The second thing I wanted to do was set a poll on this to see what everyone else thinks. Guess which way I'm going to vote!
