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

The Power BI Data Visualization World Championships is back! Get ahead of the game and start preparing now! Learn more

Reply
paulotv
Frequent Visitor

Calculating the Difference between two averages

Hi there, I am relatively new to Power BI ( I am using Version: 2.57.5068.721 64-bit (April 2018).

 

I want to show the variance between two averages for gender by year and group - my data table is below & my desired output.

 

I've tried quick measure, measures & new columns but (so far) I've failed. Can anyone help?

 

Thanks in advance.

Paul

 

 

datatable.PNGdesired output.PNGWhat I have.PNG

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
Anonymous
Not applicable

Step 1:  Create a Measure that simply creates an average, ignoring Gender and Timeframes.  This could look something like:

 

Average Measure = AVERAGE('YourTable'[Score])


Step 2: Create a measure that cares about Gender:

Male Average = CALCULATE(
	[Average Measure],
	'YourTable'[Gender] = "Male"
)

The female version should be easy to work out.

 

Now you can place these gender meeasures on a visual that has the Year & group as the context.

View solution in original post

3 REPLIES 3
Anonymous
Not applicable

Step 1:  Create a Measure that simply creates an average, ignoring Gender and Timeframes.  This could look something like:

 

Average Measure = AVERAGE('YourTable'[Score])


Step 2: Create a measure that cares about Gender:

Male Average = CALCULATE(
	[Average Measure],
	'YourTable'[Gender] = "Male"
)

The female version should be easy to work out.

 

Now you can place these gender meeasures on a visual that has the Year & group as the context.

Ross, a big thanks for your post & direction. I created a fourth measure to deduct the individual gender measures from each other & it worked a treat.

 

I have a question though.  How does the measure handle page filters? My data is split by seasons & I have selected the summer seasons only on this page. Is the measure smart enough to pick that up? Do you know?

 

Thanks

Paul

Anonymous
Not applicable

Measures are always context sensitive, unless you explictly write it to ignore the context.

 

So when your measure was used in a table or matrix, the context is all of the column and row context, as well as any filters on the visual, page and report.

Helpful resources

Announcements
Power BI DataViz World Championships

Power BI Dataviz World Championships

The Power BI Data Visualization World Championships is back! Get ahead of the game and start preparing now!

December 2025 Power BI Update Carousel

Power BI Monthly Update - December 2025

Check out the December 2025 Power BI Holiday Recap!

FabCon Atlanta 2026 carousel

FabCon Atlanta 2026

Join us at FabCon Atlanta, March 16-20, for the ultimate Fabric, Power BI, AI and SQL community-led event. Save $200 with code FABCOMM.