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!Calling all Data Engineers! Fabric Data Engineer (Exam DP-700) live sessions are back! Starting October 16th. Sign up.
Hi there.
I am trying to understand the difference between using:
Entradas YTD =
CALCULATE(
[Entradas Totais];
DATESYTD( 'dCalendário'[Data] )
)
... and using:
Entradas YTD v2 =
CALCULATE(
[Entradas Totais];
FILTER(
'dCalendário';
DATESYTD( 'dCalendário'[Data] )
)
)
The first option works, but the second one rises an error saying that multiple values has been supplied. From my understanding DATESYTD returns me a single colun table with dates from the first date of the year of the current context and the last date of the current context, and it will filter table dCalendário, and this filtered dCalendário will filter my measure [Entradas Totais].
Can someone explain to me what concept I am missing?
Thanks in advance.
Solved! Go to Solution.
I'll take a shot at it. While Calculate() and Calculatetable() accept tables as filter arguments, Filter() is an iterator and is looking for an evaluation to do on each row. The measure you've written provides a table there instead. If you replace Filter() with Calculatetable(), it would work.
If this works for you, please mark it as solution. Kudos are appreciated too. Please let me know if not.
Regards,
Pat
To learn more about Power BI, follow me on Twitter or subscribe on YouTube.
I'll take a shot at it. While Calculate() and Calculatetable() accept tables as filter arguments, Filter() is an iterator and is looking for an evaluation to do on each row. The measure you've written provides a table there instead. If you replace Filter() with Calculatetable(), it would work.
If this works for you, please mark it as solution. Kudos are appreciated too. Please let me know if not.
Regards,
Pat
To learn more about Power BI, follow me on Twitter or subscribe on YouTube.
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.
User | Count |
---|---|
15 | |
14 | |
12 | |
10 | |
9 |