Table:
Matrix:
Hello, I Have the same problem, but when I changed to Matrix visualization, it only shows on column, and not all columns as the table visualization, the problem with the table visualization is that it shows duplicated data. Any idea how can I show data in matrix (without duplicates) in the same column order as a table?
Many thanks
For reference, my table looks like this...
... and my matrix looks like this.
On the matrix, you want to click on the forked drill down arrow until all fields are showing.
Which results in something like this.
From here, open the format section (the paint roller icon below the visualization pane), expand Row Headers, and turn Stepped layout to off.
This gives you a matrix that looks like this.
Related
I currently have a report that kind of looks like this in Excel. Is it possible to create the same structure with the color formatting in Power BI? Especially with the Percentage Sale and Sales Amount below each other in the row?
I tried using Matrix visual but I kind of run into a problem since the columns would have different format types - whole number and percentage. Also tried with showing columns in rows, while using Percentage Sale and Sales Amount as two columns. But then I would have problems with the color formatting. Any ideas how to achieve it in Power BI?
Its actually simple ..... just follow these steps
1.) You can use matrix or table both... but I preferred tables
2.) Go to format Visual (In visualistation you can see 3 option... its the middle one)
3.) After that click on values.
4.) Now you can se background color , alterante background color etc
5.) Just choose it acc to preferences
If you want a bar label in a selected column then,
6.)In build format, right click on your column (which you want to customize)
7.)Select conditional formatting
8.)Now you can change color
9.)apply this. After that you can see your data of selected columns are showing grid bars
Team,
I'm trying to format individual cells within a Power BI matrix table. It wouldn't be a conditional formatting because it's not based on the values of the cell, rather it's based on the intersection of my X and Y labels.
The first image is my starting matrix table and the second image is how i'd like to format the cells.
I believe you are looking for the Table Heatmap visual. it is for free. Tick the 3 dots and click "Get more visuals".
Could you please help me understand the conceptual difference?
When do we use one over the other and how they are included in the data model?
Measures, calculated columns and calculated tables all use Data Analysis Expressions (DAX).
Calculated columns work in the horizontal direction of a table
and they add a value to each row of the table that can later be used
for filtering, e.g. on the axis of a diagram.
Measures work in the vertical direction of a table since they aggregate or summarize the values in a column. They are typically the contents of a diagram.
Both calculated columns and tables will add data to the model, just like the M-code in PowerQuery does. This data is recalculated on model refresh and otherwise won't change. In contrast measures add formulas only that will be calulated depending on the filter context.
I would like to create a simple chart from 2 or more columns in Power BI.
Here's my data, for each column, a 1 marks an occurrence of an event, null means it did not happen.
I would like to turn this data into a very simple bar graph, showing both these fields' numeric totals (i.e. summing all the 1's). The bars would be shown side by side. I would like it to look exactly like this, only instead of male/female it would show "alcohol occurrences" and "MDMA" occurrences.
Here's my stacked column chart:
And when I try and put the column names on the axes so that they can be properly labeled, I get this:
I can achieve most of what I want using a clustered bar chart, but the problem there is that it won't let me label the axis with the alcohol / MDMA column names:
How can I make a simple, labeled graph, stacking both columns up against each other, showing the numeric sums for each column? Again, I want it to look exactly as the male/female example shown above. Is this even possible? Thank you in advance.
In the above scenario, all the values are considered to be in the same category and that means there is no direct way to do this. There are a couple of workarounds to make it look like the desired output:
To get the gap between the two bars:
You should create a new measure, Measure New = 0
Add this measure in the middle of the two values in the bar chart
This should give you a gap in between the two bars
To get the axis values added:
Create two text boxes with the text "Alcohol" and "MDMA" added
Place these text boxes below the respective bars to make it look like they are the axis values
These workarounds can become quite tedious when you have to do it for a larger number of charts/values. On a lighter note, it baffles me that you can consistently come up with these specific scenarios where you expect the charts to do exactly the opposite of what they are meant for 😉
Hi I'm trying to create a Bar Chart like this (This chart is an illustration, not created from data yet):
If the data is being fetched from a single table, how can I have dual color scheme for bar is past and future. Also how can I place a moving marker that automatically updates the TODAY placard based on whenever the report is viewed and accordingly bars should follow the past and future color schemes.
Schema is roughly as follows:
Table1: Issue ID, Release name, issue priority
Table2: Release name, Release date
In Power BI as well as in Excel, the secret is in the data layout. You can't just have all your past and future data in two columns and magically expect that some of them will turn out red and orange instead of dark and light gray.
You will need to prep your data source to include stacked series for the light gray, dark gray, red and orange series. Stack all series on top of each other and make sure that where the red and orange series have values, there are only zero values for the gray series.
I suggest you use four columns for four stacked series and divide the values accordingly.
In Power BI, you can apply the same principle as in this Excel screenshot.
Let me know if you need help translating that to Power BI.
Edit: The Power BI data does not have to be static. You can build columns with Dax functions that arrange the data in the pattern required. Add four columns to your data model with the formulas
chtPastProdA = if(tblProducts[Date]<TODAY(),tblProducts[Product A],0)
chtPastProdB = if(tblProducts[Date]<today(),tblProducts[Product B],0)
chtFutureProdA = if(tblProducts[Date]>=today(),tblProducts[Product A],0)
chtFutureProdB = if(tblProducts[Date]>=today(),tblProducts[Product B],0)
Then build a stacked column chart and stack all four of these series. Format the colors.
For the "Today" marker you would need a custom label, which Power BI currently does not support. But since the demarcation between gray and red/yellow is today, it's quite obvious where the current date is, anyway.