Join us at FabCon Atlanta from March 16 - 20, 2026, for the ultimate Fabric, Power BI, AI and SQL community-led event. Save $200 with code FABCOMM.
Register now!Join the Fabric FabCon Global Hackathon—running virtually through Nov 3. Open to all skill levels. $10,000 in prizes! Register now.
Hi all,
I have a dataset which contains a lot of information about our members.
I would like to be able to calculate how many members we had on different dates. For example, how many active members where there in January 2019, 2020, and so on.
I have created a dummy-file to make it easier to understand the data.
This is the link to the dummy-file: https://www.dropbox.com/s/hy42wzs7prqcw9y/Dummy-file%20members.pbix?dl=0
It would be great if there was an ability to just use a date filter/slicer and the exact number on the date you choose would come up.
Best regard
Andreas
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @Anonymous
not sure if this is what you're looking for
Count =
VAR CurrentDate = MAX ( 'Date'[Date] )
RETURN
COUNTROWS (
FILTER (
Tabell2,
Tabell2[From_date] <= CurrentDate
&& Tabell2[To_date] >= CurrentDate
&& Tabell2[Status] = "Active"
)
)
Hi @Anonymous
Please clarify your logic when selecting a period rather than selecting a single date. For example if the maximum selected date is after the [To_Date] shall the account be counted as Active or Ended? Same for the minimum selected date compared to [From_Date]. Please consider all cases and advise.
Hi @tamerj1,
Thank you for your reply!
The " To_Date" updates automatically everyday and shows todays date if the member still has an active account. If the member decided to end its membership yesterday, the "To_date" would not update anymore and be set to 30.09.2022 and the status would change to "Ended"
The "From_date" only gives us information about when the member joined and it will not change.
Status | Membership | From_date | To_date |
Active | Gold | 01.01.2022 | 30.09.2022 |
Ended | Silver | 01.01.2022 | 01.06.2022 |
This table simplify the problem very much.
As of today we have one active member, but i want to be able to choose a date this year, for example 01.05.2022 and be able to see that at this time we had 2 active members. Even though the second member in the table does not have an "active" status as of today, he still had it 01.05.2022.
Hopefully this was clarifying 😀
@Anonymous
Thank you for the clear description. However this was not my question. You are talking about selecting a single date, but what about selecting a period, a week of a month or just random period in the time line slicer?
Sorry i might have misunderstood your question @tamerj1 😀
The logic behind it is becuase i want to be able to compare how many active members there were for example in 01.05.2021 vs 01.05.2022. I have not found a sloution to go back in time and see how many "activ" members there were on a specific date..
Another usefule reason to do this could be to see the growth, if i can se how many active members we had 01.01.2022 and compare it to how many there are today i could calculate the growth.
Hi @tamerj1 , maybe you have some solution for @Anonymous
Extremely busy these days. I'll try to have a look at it tomorrow
Hi @Anonymous Please review the file to see if I understood your problem correctly
Hi @DimaMD
Thank you for your reply 😊
I think we maybe have misunderstood eachother.
If you see the picture below i want to be able to just drag the dates to for example 29.11.2020 as show in the picture at the number of active mebers on that day will show.
@Anonymous In the example you provided, there is no such date, do you want to see in the period "From_date" and "To_date"
@DimaMD Sorry if i have been a bit unclear 😊
The "from_date" shows when the person joined as a member and the "To_date" shows information about when the perons ended his/her membership. If the person still is a active member the "To_date" will be sat as the date today.
So i want to be able to go back in time and see how many activ members where there on specific dates.
Join the Fabric FabCon Global Hackathon—running virtually through Nov 3. Open to all skill levels. $10,000 in prizes!
Check out the September 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.