Power BI is turning 10! Tune in for a special live episode on July 24 with behind-the-scenes stories, product evolution highlights, and a sneak peek at what’s in store for the future.
Save the dateEnhance your career with this limited time 50% discount on Fabric and Power BI exams. Ends August 31st. Request your voucher.
@Anonymous
So again.. it's a measure. Please try
=
SUMX (
VALUES ( 'Customers'[Store Names] ),
DIVIDE (
[Custom $ Sales],
CALCULATE ( [Sales of the total market], ALL ( 'Customers' ) )
) * 100
)
Hi @Anonymous
What do have on the rows of your table/matrix visual? How many source data tables are involved in the two measures? what is the dax for both measures?
So for Custom $ Sales, I've created this measure to bring Sales from all my customers. There's just one source table for the Custom $ sales, and then sales of the total market is also it's own measure in the table.
My retailer names come from table: 'Customers'[Store Names], Custom $ sales is 'Sales'[Custom $ Sales] and then Sales of the total market is from 'Sales'[Sales of the total market]
@Anonymous
Please try
=
SUMX (
VALUES ( 'Customers'[Store Names] ),
DIVIDE (
CALCULATE ( SUM ( 'Sales'[Custom $ Sales] ) ),
CALCULATE ( SUM ( 'Sales'[Sales of the total market] ), ALL ( 'Customers' ) )
) * 100
)
Hey! I tried this, but for the 'Sales'[Custom $ Sales] it says they're not the right parameter... I created these measures within 'Sales'
@Anonymous
So again.. it's a measure. Please try
=
SUMX (
VALUES ( 'Customers'[Store Names] ),
DIVIDE (
[Custom $ Sales],
CALCULATE ( [Sales of the total market], ALL ( 'Customers' ) )
) * 100
)
hello @Anonymous ,
you can use the following:
Your measure = (SUM(table[Custom Sales]) / CALCULATE(SUM(table[Custom Sales]),ALL(table)))) * 100
Check out the July 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.
This is your chance to engage directly with the engineering team behind Fabric and Power BI. Share your experiences and shape the future.
User | Count |
---|---|
23 | |
10 | |
10 | |
9 | |
7 |