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,
Is there a formula I can use that can be a continuous if then statement without having to write it all out?
So far this is my formula for Jan 1,2014:
Solved! Go to Solution.
hi @Anonymous
The simple way is use RANKX Function to create a calculate column
Column=RANKX('Date',[Date],,ASC)
and here is sample pbix file, please try it.
Regards,
Lin
hi @Anonymous
The simple way is use RANKX Function to create a calculate column
Column=RANKX('Date',[Date],,ASC)
and here is sample pbix file, please try it.
Regards,
Lin
thank you so so much!
Sarah
And maybe this will help:
https://community.powerbi.com/t5/Quick-Measures-Gallery/Sequential/m-p/380231#M116
@Greg_Deckler this is great! but how do i show it over the years? so 1/1/2014 would be 1, but 1/1/2015 would be 366, 1/1/2016 would be 732 (bc of leap year)
Right, that was the purpose of Sequential, to give a sequential number that spanned years. I think I did it based on weeks and not days but should be relatively easy to modify for days. You may have to scroll through the entire thread because I think there were some bug fixes. I have the official version in my book which I believe had all of the bug fixes and other improvements that I came up with. Let me know if you need some help modifying it. I can probably find some time to go grab my latest code from my book and modify it for day instead of week.
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.