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Ensure learners don't try to save a new file in main branch #4304
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@@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ In order to let dbt connect to your warehouse, you'll need to generate a keyfile | |
4. Click **Upload a Service Account JSON File** in settings. | ||
5. Select the JSON file you downloaded in [Generate BigQuery credentials](#generate-bigquery-credentials) and dbt Cloud will fill in all the necessary fields. | ||
6. Click **Test Connection**. This verifies that dbt Cloud can access your BigQuery account. | ||
7. Click **Next** if the test succeeded. If it failed, you might need to go back and regenerate your BigQuery credentials. | ||
7. Click **Next** if the test succeeded. If it fails, you might need to go back and regenerate your BigQuery credentials. | ||
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## Set up a dbt Cloud managed repository | ||
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1. Click **Start developing in the IDE**. It might take a few minutes for your project to spin up for the first time as it establishes your git connection, clones your repo, and tests the connection to the warehouse. | ||
2. Above the file tree to the left, click **Initialize dbt project**. This builds out your folder structure with example models. | ||
3. Make your initial commit by clicking **Commit and sync**. Use the commit message `initial commit` and click **Commit**. This creates the first commit to your managed repo and allows you to open a branch where you can add new dbt code. | ||
3. Make your initial commit by clicking **Commit and sync**. Use the commit message `initial commit` and click **Commit**. This creates the first commit to your managed repo and allows you to open a branch where you can add a new dbt code. | ||
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Grammatical error Fix.
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4. You can now directly query data from your warehouse and execute `dbt run`. You can try this out now: | ||
- Click **+ Create new file**, add this query to the new file, and click **Save as** to save the new file: | ||
There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Addressing the issue. There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. @anksu2024 Removing this might muddle the instructions. Would it be better to direct the customer to put this on a different branch? There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. I followed the instructions and the same thing we are doing in the next section. i.e. we create a new branch and our first model on the branch. Hence, it would be a redundant activity, and the learner's flow would become more streamlined with this change. As a learner myself, I struggled for some time with this. Hence, I thought of adding. There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. @matthewshaver : Following up on this. Thx. There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. @anksu2024 Thank you for that perspective. I agree with the changes, but we must make some more adjustments to this section due to removing the text. I'll merge directly here. There was a problem hiding this comment. Choose a reason for hiding this commentThe reason will be displayed to describe this comment to others. Learn more. Nevermind! I see you added it, Thank you! |
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```sql | ||
select * from `dbt-tutorial.jaffle_shop.customers` | ||
``` | ||
- In the command line bar at the bottom, enter `dbt run` and click **Enter**. You should see a `dbt run succeeded` message. | ||
- To confirm the success of the above command, navigate to the BigQuery Console and discover the newly created models. | ||
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## Build your first model | ||
1. Under **Version Control** on the left, click **Create branch**. You can name it `add-customers-model`. You need to create a new branch since the main branch is set to read-only mode. | ||
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6. Enter `dbt run` in the command prompt at the bottom of the screen. You should get a successful run and see the three models. | ||
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Later, you can connect your business intelligence (BI) tools to these views and tables so they only read cleaned up data rather than raw data in your BI tool. | ||
Later, you can connect your business intelligence (BI) tools to these views and tables so they only read cleaned-up data rather than raw data in your BI tool. | ||
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#### FAQs | ||
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4. Execute `dbt run`. | ||
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This time, when you performed a `dbt run`, separate views/tables were created for `stg_customers`, `stg_orders` and `customers`. dbt inferred the order to run these models. Because `customers` depends on `stg_customers` and `stg_orders`, dbt builds `customers` last. You do not need to explicitly define these dependencies. | ||
This time, when you performed a `dbt run`, separate views/tables were created for `stg_customers`, `stg_orders`, and `customers`. dbt inferred the order to run these models. Because `customers` depends on `stg_customers` and `stg_orders`, dbt builds `customers` last. You do not need to explicitly define these dependencies. | ||
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#### FAQs {#faq-2} | ||
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Grammatical Error Correction.