Measures in the Fact Tables The values that quantify facts are usually numeric, and are often referred to as measures. Measures are typically additive along all dimensions, such as Quantity in a sales fact table. A sum of Quantity by customer, product, time, or any combination of these dimensions results in a meaningful value. Additive - Additive measures are facts that can be added up through all of the dimensions in the fact table. A sales fact is a good example for additive fact. Semi-Additive - Measures that can be summed up for some of the dimensions in the fact table, but not the others. Eg: quantity-on-hand can be added along the Warehouse dimension to achieve the total-quantity-on-hand Non-Additive - Measures that cannot be added along any dimension are truly non-additive. Non-additive measures can often be combined with additive measures to create new additive measures Eg: Sale Price =Quantity*Price Facts which have percentages, ra...