Measure in DAX to calculate YTD for chosen month only for Power BI - powerbi

How to construct DAX measure to calculate sum of YTD value for specific month?
Here we have FactTable grouped by months. FactTable is filled with both Actual data and Forecast data. The only way to know when Actual end is information in table [Cut of date] in column [End of YTD]. In table [Cut of date] in column [End of YTD] – it is a single value table – we have the interesting chosen month, for which we want to see the calculation of YTD. In our case it is March. FactTable is updated irregularly every month with usually one month delay. There is no way of linking it to time functions like TODAY because of irregular update.
We would like to have a correct value of YTD displayed in yellow Card Visual for the month [End of YTD]. When we click on the slicer on "2018-03" we get almost what we want – correct value of 66 in the yellow Card. However this solution is not automatic. I want to see correct value automatically when the [End of YTD] month changes, in our case to April or then to May. I do not want it done by user.
My desperate effort can be downloaded from file: DAX YTD.pbix
I pursued the deer in various ways:
By using FILTER function in DAX measures. But it seems that the
FILTER function is to harsh. It is applied to fact table first,
selecting only one month, and then calculating YTD value wrongly. So if
there would be any option for forcing order of calculation and filtering, there would
be hope.
I tried SWITCH function to display proper result
for specific month and 0 or null for other months. Although I
succeed in this, I was not able to take advantage of it. When it
came to filtering I was as hopeless as before. BTW I would be able
to make it if SWITCH produced totals at the end of the table, but it
does not. Surprisingly.
I put some hopes in RELATED function to display proper results in the [Cut off date] table. I have not walk out of the fog so far.
I would appreciate your help.
Update before bounty.
Going to higher level. I have introduced a Category column to FactTable. Please download DAX YTD by category.pbix. So filtering gets more complex now. I would like to have correct YTD figures for Apples category.

Did you use the Date column from the Calendar table, instead of the one from FactTable?
If you use the date column from FactTable, when you apply a filter on the date, it will filter on the fact records which is in March, and then do the calculation afterwards, hence the result 33.
If you use the one from Calendar, when you apply a filter on it, it filters the records on Calendar (which you want to show in the chart), so the underlying calculation will still remain intact.
A working example:
Calendar = CALENDAR(DATE(2010, 1, 1), DATE(2020, 12, 31))
I suggest you to change the calculations of the measures to avoid missing values in some cases:
Total = SUM(FactTable[Value])
MTD = TOTALMTD([Total], 'Calendar'[Date])
YTD = TOTALYTD([Total], 'Calendar'[Date])
UPDATE:
It's much clearer to me what you want to achieve now but it still seems an XY problem to me.
I understand that you want to show the dashboard as is so that users do not need to click/input every time to see what they are supposed to see. That's why I don't get why you need to create a new table to store the Cut off date (End of YTD). How is it going to be maintained automatically?
The relative date filtering solution above actually still works in the .pbix file you've shared. If you drag the Date column from the Calendar table to visual level filters for the yellow card and add the relative date filtering, it should work as below:
For the End of YTD visual, you can use the following measure to get the first day of last calendar month, so you don't need to create another table for it:
End of YTD = EOMONTH(TODAY(), -2) + 1
And hopefully this is what you want to achieve:
Updated file for your reference.
UPDATE again:
I think you'll have to write your own YTD calculation instead of using the built-in one, so that you can make use of the cut off date you defined in another table. Here I assume that you have one and only one row in 'Cut off date'[End of YTD]. Note that I've added ALL() to the filter, so that the yellow card remains the same (66) instead of showing blank when some other rows/filters are clicked:
YTD_Special =
CALCULATE(
[Total],
FILTER(
ALL(FactTable),
FactTable[Date] >= DATE(YEAR(VALUES('Cut off date'[End of YTD])), 1, 1) &&
FactTable[Date] <= VALUES('Cut off date'[End of YTD])
)
)

I would resolve this by adding a calculated column to your Calendar table to categorise each row into either "YTD" or "Other", e.g.
Is YTD =
IF (
[Date] >= DATE ( YEAR ( DISTINCT ( 'Cut off date'[End of YTD] ) ), 1, 1 )
&& [Date] <= DISTINCT ( 'Cut off date'[End of YTD] ),
"YTD",
"Other"
)
I would then add the new Is YTD field to the Visual level filters of your Card visual, and choose YTD from the Basic filtering list. The measure shown can be your simple Total measure: SUM(FactTable[Value]).
This is a far more flexible and resuable solution than any specific measure gymnastics. You will not need an explosion of measures to apply the required logic on top of every base measure - they will all just work naturally. You can apply the filter at any level: Visual, Page, Report, or put it in a Slicer for control by the end user.
I prefer to return text results e.g. "YTD" / "Other" (rather than 1/0, True/False or Yes/No), as this allows for easy extension to other requirements e.g. "Prior YTD" (1 Jan 2017 to 1 Mar 2017). It also is clearer when used in visuals.
Actually I shouldn't claim the credit for this design - this roughly follows how Cognos Transformer's Relative Time functionality worked back in the 90s.

I did something like this in my Periodic/YTD report (last sheet): http://ciprianbusila.ro/
I have used the index value of the month selected (range 1-12) and based on this I have created a measure using max function please see the code below:
ACT = var
ACT_periodic=calculate([Value],Scenarios[Scenario]=values(Scenarios[Scenario]))
var max_month=max(Periods[Period Order])
var ACT_YTD=CALCULATE([Value],Scenarios[Scenario]=VALUES(Scenarios[Scenario]),all(Periods[Month]),Periods[Period Order]<=max_month)
var myselection=if(HASONEVALUE(MRD_view[.]),values(MRD_view[.]),"PERIODIC")
return
switch(
true(),
myselection="PERIODIC",ACT_periodic,
myselection="YEAR TO DATE",ACT_YTD,
ACT_periodic
)

Related

IF 'AND-OR' ISFILTERED combination in DAX giving problems

Below is the sample dataset
The data has two slicers ( date and category ) shown below
I am writing a DAX Statement to multiply the sum(values) * 10 only if the date range is in the current year 2023.
The StartYear gives the start of the current year, firstD gives the lowest date from the date slicer.
Formula =
var new = sum(Test[Value]) * 10
var startyear = DATE(YEAR(TODAY()),1,1)
var firstD = CALCULATE( MIN( Test[Date]), ALLSELECTED(Test[Date]) )
return if( ISFILTERED(Test[Categories]) && firstD >= startyear, new, 0 )
Now when I filter dates to 2023, the total value should be 2300 but it shows as 0
However the DAX works when I select A or B
If we remove the ISFILTERED function then, it gives wrong value, the expected value is 0 because the start date is in 2022, but it shows 650
let me know if that is the right syntax
It looks like you are not using a separate calendar table to handle this, which you need!
In your very last example you have set your slicer to some time late 2022, but the minimum value of 'Test'[Date] for your selected category is in year 2023. Hint: set the slicer to e.g. 2022-12-14, this will include a 2022-date for Category A in your data.
Your measure behaves exactly how it is supposed to, in other words!
To fix this, you need to do the following:
Create a calendar table in your model, this should contain contiguous dates, which is necessary for the filtering method you want
Establish a relationship between the calendar table and existing Test table.
Use the date column from your new calendar table in your slicer and as date reference in your measure
Exactly how to create a calendar table is thoroughly documented on Google, I recommend you search and find an article or video you understand for implementing this.
Lastly: Your use of ISFILTERED in this measure seems strange, since you mention nowhere the requirement of only showing a number if the column you are testing filtering on is filtered, if that makes sense.. :-) The way you describe your calculation, you only need to check whether the selected date range starts in current year.

Why SAMEPERIODLASTYEAR function does not generate correct result

First I calculated Year to date written Premiu:
YTD WP = TOTALYTD([Ttl WP],dim_Date[Date]) //works fine
Then in order to calculate the same for previous year I'm using SAMEPERIODLASTYEAR function:
PY WP = CALCULATE([YTD WP],
SAMEPERIODLASTYEAR(dim_Date[Date]), ALL(dim_Date)
)
The result should be $72,550 M. Where does it get $127.60M???
So, unfortunately it does not give me correct result.
I have similar report already and function works fine, but why it doesn't work in this situation?
UPDATE 1:
Using DATESYTD to get numbers for previous year also gives me 127M
PY WP = CALCULATE([YTD WP],
DATEADD(DATESYTD(dim_Date[Date]),-1,YEAR)
)
UPDATE 2:
PY WP = CALCULATE(
[YTD WP], SAMEPERIODLASTYEAR(DATESYTD(dim_Date[Date])), ALL(dim_Date)
)
UPDATE 3:
Marked dim_Date table as "Date" table.
PY WP = TOTALYTD([Ttl WP], SAMEPERIODLASTYEAR(dim_Date[Date]))
But still gives incorrect number.
I used filter function to make sure what is the number should be:
PrevYear = CALCULATE([Ttl WP],FILTER(dim_Date,dim_Date[Date] >=VALUE("2018-01-01") && dim_Date[Date] <=VALUE("2018-03-31")))
And I got correct number.
You forgot to mark the dim_Date table as the Date Table. Without this, the Time Intelligence functions do not work correctly.
To do this, right click the dim_Date table, and choose Mark as Date Table from the context menu. You can then choose the Date column as the key. The following snippet is taken from Time Intelligence in Power Pivot documentation but it applies to all products compatible with DAX.
In order to work with time-intelligence functions, you need to have a date table included in your Data Model. The date table must include a column with one row for every day of each year included in your data. This column is considered to be the Date column (although it can be named whatever you like). Many time-intelligence functions require the date column in order to calculate according to the dates you select as fields in a report. For example, if you have a measure that calculates a closing quarter-end balance by using the CLOSINGBALANCEQTR function, in order for Power Pivot to know when the end of the quarter really is, it must reference the date column in the date table to know when the quarter starts and ends.
Once this is done, your calculations work fine - though your PY WP measure can be simplified to:
[PY WP] = TOTALYTD([Ttl WP], SAMEPERIODLASTYEAR(dim_Date[Date]))
For more information, see Set and use date tables in Power BI;

Filter by last not blank date in Power BI

I have data from multiple countries on a monthly basis. Since the updates are not regular, I want to set up filter to visuals, so they would show the last month for which I have data from all the countries. I have data from each country loaded into a separate dataset, which then are merged into one big. Is there an easy way to place such filter? I managed to use "LASTDATE" function in each of country sets to find which date is last, but if I try to filter with that measure, I simply get nothing in a result. Thanks!
Well, this feels a little clunky to me but I believe it will work for you. There are two steps. The first is to create a summary table that reads through your data and counts the number of distinct countries that you have in each month. This will be a new table in your model, so go into the modeling tab, click 'New Table' and add this DAX. Obviously, correct for your table and column names.
SUMMARIZED_ROWS = SUMMARIZE(
'Table1'
,Table1[Month]
,"CountOfCountries"
,DISTINCTCOUNT(Table1[Country])
)
Now add a measure to the table (or anywhere) like this:
MonthWithMostCountries = CALCULATE(
LASTNONBLANK(SUMMARIZED_ROWS[Month], 1 )
, FILTER(SUMMARIZED_ROWS, SUMMARIZED_ROWS[CountOfCountries] = MAX(SUMMARIZED_ROWS[CountOfCountries]) ) )
This is going to give you the month where you have the most distinct countries in your data. You'll want to look at it in a card or similarly isolated visual as it is a measure and can be affected by filter context.
So, on the left is my mock data - 3 countries, 3 months each with a 1 month stagger. On the right you see the result of the Summarize table. Then the measure showing the final result.
Hope it helps.

Power BI: Percent Change Formula

I want to create a simple percent change formula in power BI. Specifically, I want to evaluate month over month %change in cost. I know that percent change can be defined in different ways, so to be clear this is the formula that I am referring to:
%change = ([current value] - [previous value])/[previous value].
Here is an example in Excel of what I want to achieve:
I cannot find a way to target a specific row in a DAX formula. It seems that power BI only wants to include aggregate values such as sum, max, etc.
As a final note, I know that PowerBI includes a percent change "quick measure". However, the 'Base Value' always requires you to select aggregate measure instead of a single row value.
As Alexis mentioned, there is no concept of referring to a specific row in DAX. It can be a hard notion for people who are used to Excel, but if you want to take advantage of PowerBi, you will have to "unlearn" Excel way of thinking.
To accomplish your goal, you need to do some data modeling first. As a common practice, replace your "Date" column with a proper Calendar table:
Calendar table explained
As a result, you will have a data model in PowerBi that looks something like this:
Once you have such structure in place, DAX is simple:
Current Month Cost = SUM(Expenses[Cost])
Previous Month Cost = CALCULATE( [Current Month Cost], PREVIOUSMONTH(Calendar[Date]))
% Change = DIVIDE( [Current Month Cost] - [Previous Month Cost], [Previous Month Cost])
I used Earlier to get the previous date value for Open
Accum = var previousOpen=CALCULATE(MAX(EOG[Open]),FILTER(EOG,EOG[Date]<EARLIER('EOG'[Date],1))) return Divide(EOG[Open]-previousOpen,previousOpen)+1

Power BI Rolling Average

I've used the new Quick Measures feature of Power BI to build a 3 month rolling average calculation and it's working well. The equation is displayed below. However, when I try to use this metric in a time series visualization, the calculations are displaying three months past the current month, but I'd like for the calculation to stop at the current month.
I've played around with the __DATE_PERIOD variable to no avail. My date filter for the page is set to show all dates in the current months or 12 months prior via a calculated column on the date table.
Is anyone aware of how I can get the visualization to end at the current month?
Average Days to Close Rolling Average =
IF(
ISFILTERED('Date'[Date]),
ERROR("Time intelligence quick measures can only be grouped or filtered by the Power BI-provided date hierarchy."),
VAR __LAST_DATE =
ENDOFMONTH('Date'[Date].[Date])
VAR __DATE_PERIOD =
DATESBETWEEN(
'Date'[Date].[Date],
STARTOFMONTH(DATEADD(__LAST_DATE, -3, MONTH)),
__LAST_DATE
)
RETURN
AVERAGEX(
CALCULATETABLE(
SUMMARIZE(
VALUES('Date'),
'Date'[Date].[Year],
'Date'[Date].[QuarterNo],
'Date'[Date].[Quarter],
'Date'[Date].[MonthNo],
'Date'[Date].[Month]
),
__DATE_PERIOD
),
CALCULATE(
'Closed Opportunities'[Average Days to Close],
ALL('Date'[Date].[Day])
)
)
)
In order to limit what is displayed within your chart, you need to filter the applicable date field so it only displays the dates you desire. In this case, you only want it to include dates <= today.
In order to automatically filter it when it is refreshed, I typically add a custom DAX column to the date table that I can filer on. In this case it would be something along the lines of:
excludeFutureDatesInd = 'Date'[Date] <= TODAY()
You can then add a visual, page, or report filter selecting all dates where [excludeFutureDatesInd] = True.
Not sure if you're still having issues with this, but I'd like to share a hack fix for those landing here. I fixed this issue by filtering on the base data (in your example, this would be "Average Days to Close"). Set a visual-level filter to include only those items where Average Days to Close > 0, and you should get the extra dates cut off the end of the graph.
So long as all of your base data passes through the filter, you should be good.