If you’ve ever watched a team pour months into a semantic model—only to treat it as “the thing Power BI reads”—you’ve seen a common (and costly) mental model at work.
Semantic models shouldn’t be the last layer before visualization. In Microsoft Fabric, they can be a first-class part of the extended analytics and data science stack: something you can query, validate, profile, and even productize from notebooks. That shift is exactly what SemPy (the Python library behind Semantic Link) makes practical.
In this post, I’m going to do three things:
- Introduce SemPy for Fabric as the bridge between semantic models and the rest of your Python workflows.
- Share four “generic” functions that help you discover and understand a model’s surface area.
- Highlight three functions that make consuming semantic models straightforward, and three that unlock capabilities you’d otherwise spend real time (and compute) rebuilding yourself.
Along the way, I’ll frame these as patterns for turning semantic models into data product surface areas—usable well beyond dashboards. This is where Microsoft Fabric and #SemPy start to feel less like “BI tooling” and more like part of your day-to-day analytics engineering and Data Science workflow.
Continue reading “Semantic Models Aren’t the Finish Line: 10 Underused SemPy Functions for Fabric”