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

Score big with last-minute savings on the final tickets to FabCon Vienna. Secure your discount

Reply
poojithas
Helper III
Helper III

Incorrect Totals when using measure in table

Hi All,

I am using a measure with the below formula in my table.

poojithas_0-1681790316630.png

When I use this measure in a table, I am getting incorrect totals. The expected total is 1164 but I get 1160.

I tried using a calculated column instead of a calculated measure, but the results are still inacurate.

poojithas_1-1681790486658.png

Could someone please assist on this.

Thank you,

Poojitha

 

2 ACCEPTED SOLUTIONS

Hi @poojithas ,

 

When it comes to non-additive measures (DISTINCTCOUNT is one of them) there is no easy one solution fits all approach.

 

I recommend you the following post by sqlbi. There is loads to take away from it:

https://www.sqlbi.com/articles/why-power-bi-totals-might-seem-inaccurate/

 

Hope this helps 🙂

 

/Tom
https://www.tackytech.blog/
https://www.instagram.com/tackytechtom/

 



Did I answer your question➡️ Please, mark my post as a solution ✔️

Also happily accepting Kudos 🙂

Feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn! linkedIn

#proudtobeasuperuser 

View solution in original post

poojithas
Helper III
Helper III

This is fixed using the below logic:
=sumx(values(locn),measure2)

View solution in original post

4 REPLIES 4
poojithas
Helper III
Helper III

This is fixed using the below logic:
=sumx(values(locn),measure2)

tackytechtom
Super User
Super User

Hi @poojithas ,

 

Here a an example which might give you an idea on why your total differs from the expected outcome:

 

tackytechtom_0-1681791443380.png

 

On the left, a table where each block has a different value. In total there are 4 different values (1, 2, 3, 4), but when grouping by block and using a DISTINCTCOUNT on "Value", we can see that each block might have a different number of distinct values, i.e. California has 3 (1, 2, 3) while Florida has 2 (1, 2). The total itself does not sum over what is shown above in the table above but instead calculates the Measure without applying a filter. This means it total just returns all distinct values, that is 4 (1, 2, 3, 4).

 

Let me know if this helps 🙂

 

/Tom
https://www.tackytech.blog/
https://www.instagram.com/tackytechtom/

 

 



Did I answer your question➡️ Please, mark my post as a solution ✔️

Also happily accepting Kudos 🙂

Feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn! linkedIn

#proudtobeasuperuser 

@tackytechtom   - Thank you for the details provided on why the totals are differing.

Would like to check if there is a way we can show the expected totals and does not return the distinct values.

Hi @poojithas ,

 

When it comes to non-additive measures (DISTINCTCOUNT is one of them) there is no easy one solution fits all approach.

 

I recommend you the following post by sqlbi. There is loads to take away from it:

https://www.sqlbi.com/articles/why-power-bi-totals-might-seem-inaccurate/

 

Hope this helps 🙂

 

/Tom
https://www.tackytech.blog/
https://www.instagram.com/tackytechtom/

 



Did I answer your question➡️ Please, mark my post as a solution ✔️

Also happily accepting Kudos 🙂

Feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn! linkedIn

#proudtobeasuperuser 

Helpful resources

Announcements
August Power BI Update Carousel

Power BI Monthly Update - August 2025

Check out the August 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.