The Tabular Editor 2 is an open-source project that can edit a BIM file without accessing any data from the model. This offline capability enables quick changes to the BIM file, especially when you manipulate and manage measures, calculated columns, display folders, perspectives, and translations.

Tabular Editor 3 is the commercial version of the tool that adds many productivity features, a great DAX editor, a better UI, and dedicated support. Tabular Editor is not produced by SQLBI. We strongly recommend this tool because it is the best development environment for semantic models and DAX expressions in Power BI and Analysis Services.


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Tabular Editor is a tool that lets you easily manipulate and manage measures, calculated columns, display folders, perspectives and translations in Analysis Services Tabular and Power BI Sematic Models.

Tabular Editor 2.x is a lightweight application for quickly modifying the TOM (Tabular Object Model) of an Analysis Services or Power BI data model. The tool was originally released in 2016 and receives regular updates and bugfixes.

Both tools provide the same features in terms of which data modeling options are available, by basically exposing every object and property of the Tabular Object Model, in an intuitive and responsive user interface. You can edit advanced object properties that are not available through the standard tools. The tools can load model metadata from files or from any instance of Analysis Services. Changes are only synchronized when you hit Ctrl+S (save) thus providing an "offline" editing experience which most people consider to be superior to the "always synchronized"-mode of the standard tools. This is especially noticable when working on large and complex data models.

In addition, both tools enables making multiple model metadata changes in batches, renaming objects in batches, copy/pasting objects, dragging/dropping objects across tables and display folders, etc. The tools even have undo/redo support.

Both tools feature the Best Practice Analyzer, which continuously scans the model metadata for rules that you can define on your own, e.g. to enforce certain naming conventions, make sure non-dimension attribute columns are always hidden, etc.

Lastly, thanks to the "Save-to-folder" functionality, a new file format where every object in the model is saved as an individual file, enables parallel development and version control integration, which is something that is not easy to achieve using only the standard tools.

If you are new to tabular modeling in general, we recommend that you use the standard tools until you familiarize yourself with concepts such as calculated tables, measures, relationships, DAX, etc. At that point, try to give Tabular Editor 2.x a spin, and see how much faster it enables you to achieve certain tasks. If you like it and want more, consider Tabular Editor 3.x!

Let's say I've made my initial superelevation calculation and manually adjusted some data. Settings used for calculation were "Undivide Crowned" with 1 lane left, 2 lanes right and outside shoulders unchecked. There are 3 columns visible in tabular editor now: Left Outside Lane, Right Inside Lane and Right Outside Lane. And now I figure I want shoulders also and Left Inside Lane as well.

Autodesk's support answered that "by default superelevation tabular editor is based on the superelevation scheme calculation with all the columns apply to the given scheme, therefore it is impossible to add columns to the table which are not supposed to be there and do not include any data. In general to obtain a table with additional columns, the superelevation has to be recalculated using different scheme."

So the workaround I figured is to recalculate just 1 curve using the scheme containing all the columns I want. After recalculating the new columns appear with data filled in only for that 1 curve. For other curves there's no data but now I can enter it manually. So to answer my initial question - no it isn't possible to get these additional columns available in tabular editor without recalculating superelevation. But the easy workaround is to recalculate just 1 curve.

The other side note is about behavior of superelevation tabular editor. Sometimes I don't see the values I've entered. I have to close and open the superelevation tabular editor in order to have them appear.

OK, so @DebbieE asked a question in the forums here. Essentially the question is about whether the new paid version of Tabular Editor is "worth it". For those of you that do not know, until recently Tabular Editor was a free, open source tool that allowed direct editing of tabular data models created by Power BI. With Tabular Editor you can do things that you can't do in Power BI Desktop, like create Calculation Groups for example. The free edition is still available but the new version, Tabular Editor 3 (TE3) is now a paid subscription. TE3 comes with a laundry list of new features but, the question remains, is it worth paying for?

Now, I gave a bit of a cheeky response to @DebbieE, which, I'm quite certain, surprises zero percent of the population. But...but...I ended up feeling that @DebbieE deserved an actual proper response to her inquiry and hence I figured I'd download the evaluation copy of TE3 and take a shot at some kind of review or something. Which, let's all be honest, is in all likelihood almost certain to come out quite cheeky but I can't help myself, it's in my nature. So, hoping I don't drown in a river, here we go!

Alright, first you have to download and install the tool before you can use it. You can download TE3 here. Nice, simple download page, there is even a 64-bit version. Nice! I downloaded that one. Nice, fast 40 MB download of an MSI package and double-click. A short next, next, finish later and we're all set apparently. I fired up Power BI Desktop and was pleasantly surprised to find that TE3 had registered itself in the External Tools section of the Power BI ribbon and, even better, had not replaced my original installation of TE2. Very nice. I was actually worried that it was going to blow away my access to TE2 so kudos to the TE3 team for that!

OK, so I opened up my latest "working" file, the one I use to help me answer questions on the forums. And yes, as you can see in the image above, I am on my eighty first file for that. And, go to External Tools and click on both Tabular Editor and Tabular Editor 3. Now, let's start comparing. First Tabular Editor 2 launched in under 5 seconds with my data model all loaded up. TE3 on the other hand, by comparison, took forever. A good 20 seconds ticked by before it launched and, booo, it is requesting personal information in order to activate the 30-day free trial. So, enter my email address and, huh, blank TOM Explorer. Alright, close TE3, relaunch it from Power BI Desktop and 20-30 seconds later I have it open and my data model loads this time. Great.

Now, asking for personal information, not loading the data model the first time and the loooong loading time aside, the interface is definitely more polished and less stark as you can see in the following images:

OK, OUCH! Almost 10 times the memory utilization running against the same model as the original Tabular Editor. I guess all that fancy chrome costs memory! Maybe that's why it took so long to load, it was busy sucking up all of my memory. And yes, ha ha, I run way too many browser tabs.

Alright, so let's score this thing. We have it asking for personal information to use something that is touted as free, which, I'll be honest, I personally despise that sort of thing and then, to add insult to injury, it didn't even load my model the first time because it was busy extorting me for personal information. Oh, and it's dog slow to load and eats memory worse than Teams (or even Outlook). And here we all thought Outlook was the biggest memory hog of all time. But, on the plus side, it looks pretty.

Alright, usability is always hard because it's easy to fall into the "moved my cheese" trap. So let's try not to do that. Let's start by trying to create a Calculation Group because that's one of the hallmark things you might use TE for. In TE2, you can click on Model in the menu and then Calculation Group and no matter where you are in the TOM Explorer, you can create a Calculation Group. Now, I searched for a good 5-10 minutes trying to figure out how to create a Calculation Group in TE3 without success. I got so desparate I even humbled myself to click on Help and searched the online documentation. No dice. I finally, finally, discovered that if I right-click on Tables in the TOM Explorer I get a Create and then Calcluation Group. Or, if I click on Tables, a contextual menu item appears called Tables and I can click that, then Create and then Calculation Group. Damnit. They moved my cheese!! Alright, cheese aside, not nearly as nice of an experience overall and a minimum of 4 clicks versus 2.

OK, not the end of the world. But, there is an interface bug here. So, you still can't create Relationships and it is kind of nice that when you right-click Relationships in the TOM Explorer you don't get the grayed-out option that makes you think you are doing something wrong, you just get no options other than Properties, which is already present in the default layout soooo... In any case, the bug is in those contextual menu items. So, in the TOM Explorer if you click on Data Sources, Relationships or Shared Expressions a corresponding contextual item appears in the menu. Except that when you click that contextual menu item there are no options. Worse, the contextual elements in the menu cease to appear clicking on the other top-level items in the TOM Explorer. So, close TE3, reopen after 20-30 seconds and back in business. Note to self, don't use those contextual menu items as they mess things up. Also note, that's not the only way to make the contextual menu items stop appearing. There are apparently other ways but that one works every time. 152ee80cbc

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