Skip to main content
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

To celebrate FabCon Vienna, we are offering 50% off select exams. Ends October 3rd. Request your discount now.

Reply
DataHero
Helper I
Helper I

COUNT if DATESINPERIOD with 2 columns

Hi,


I need help with a DAX measure. I want to perform a COUNT. This COUNT should be filtered by DATESINPERIOD, which is 2022. The challenge is, that the date actually can be in 1 of 2 columns. Lets say Schritt10 or Schritt11 for example. How can i write the dax measure?

I tried some measures but they always end in errors : )

For example:

try no. 1: CountIn2022 = COUNTROWS( FILTER( YourTable, (YEAR(YourTable[Schritt10 ]) = 2022 || YEAR(YourTable[Schritt11]) = 2022)
try no. 2: 

CountIn2022 =
VAR Schritt10 =

    DATESINPERIOD (

        YourTable[Schritt10Abgeschlossen],

        DATE ( 2022, 01, 01 ),

        1,

        YEAR

    )

   

VAR Schritt11 =

    DATESINPERIOD (

        YourTable[Schritt11Abgeschlossen],

        DATE ( 2022, 01, 01 ),

        1,

        YEAR

    )

 

RETURN
CALCULATE (

    COUNT ( YourTable[Id] ),

    (

        Schritt10=TRUE() || Schritt11=TRUE()

))


I hope someone can help me.
Thank you in advance.

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
ppm1
Solution Sage
Solution Sage

You could consider unpivoting your data to simplify things. This approach won't be performant at large scale, but here is one way to do it. 

DIP =
VAR dip =
    DATESINPERIOD ( 'Date'[Date], MAX ( 'Date'[Date] ), -1, YEAR )
VAR result =
    COUNTROWS (
        FILTER ( YourTable, YourTable[Schritt10] IN dip || YourTable[Schritt11] IN dip )
    )
RETURN
    result

 

If you have many duplicate rows in YourTable, this should be faster.

DIP2 =
VAR dip =
    DATESINPERIOD ( 'Date'[Date], MAX ( 'Date'[Date] ), -1, YEAR )
VAR summarizedates =
    SUMMARIZE (
        YourTable,
        YourTable[Schritt10],
        YourTable[Schritt11],
        "cCount", COUNT ( YourTable[Schritt10] )
    )
VAR result =
    SUMX (
        FILTER (
            summarizedates,
            YourTable[Schritt10]
                IN dip
                    || YourTable[Schritt11] IN dip
        ),
        [cCount]
    )
RETURN
    result

 

Pat

Microsoft Employee

View solution in original post

2 REPLIES 2
ppm1
Solution Sage
Solution Sage

You could consider unpivoting your data to simplify things. This approach won't be performant at large scale, but here is one way to do it. 

DIP =
VAR dip =
    DATESINPERIOD ( 'Date'[Date], MAX ( 'Date'[Date] ), -1, YEAR )
VAR result =
    COUNTROWS (
        FILTER ( YourTable, YourTable[Schritt10] IN dip || YourTable[Schritt11] IN dip )
    )
RETURN
    result

 

If you have many duplicate rows in YourTable, this should be faster.

DIP2 =
VAR dip =
    DATESINPERIOD ( 'Date'[Date], MAX ( 'Date'[Date] ), -1, YEAR )
VAR summarizedates =
    SUMMARIZE (
        YourTable,
        YourTable[Schritt10],
        YourTable[Schritt11],
        "cCount", COUNT ( YourTable[Schritt10] )
    )
VAR result =
    SUMX (
        FILTER (
            summarizedates,
            YourTable[Schritt10]
                IN dip
                    || YourTable[Schritt11] IN dip
        ),
        [cCount]
    )
RETURN
    result

 

Pat

Microsoft Employee

Thank you ppm1,

the first approach works perfectly!
I didnt know about the IN.

Helpful resources

Announcements
September Power BI Update Carousel

Power BI Monthly Update - September 2025

Check out the September 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.

August 2025 community update carousel

Fabric Community Update - August 2025

Find out what's new and trending in the Fabric community.