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!Vote for your favorite vizzies from the Power BI Dataviz World Championship submissions. Vote now!
Hi,
I currently have this data:
And I wish to have the following results:
How can I create this using the "New Table" function? I might also create a new excel sheet with the "Categories". How then can I utilize DAX
Thanks in advance!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @vutruong91 ,
The easist way is on the query editor, select the columns Project and choose unpivot columns. This is my recommend way.
However you can also do this in DAX you can do the following formula:
DAX_Table =
UNION (
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Projects_Dax;
"DESCRIPTION"; Projects_Dax[Description];
"VALUE"; Projects_Dax[Project A];
"FOR"; "Project A"
);
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Projects_Dax;
"DESCRIPTION"; Projects_Dax[Description];
"VALUE"; Projects_Dax[Project B];
"FOR"; "Project B"
);
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Projects_Dax;
"DESCRIPTION"; Projects_Dax[Description];
"VALUE"; Projects_Dax[Project C];
"FOR"; "Project C"
);
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Projects_Dax;
"DESCRIPTION"; Projects_Dax[Description];
"VALUE"; Projects_Dax[Project D];
"FOR"; "Project D"
)
)
Check attach the PBIX file with both options.
Regards,
MFelix
Regards
Miguel Félix
Proud to be a Super User!
Check out my blog: Power BI em PortuguêsIs there a way to do this for an unknown / changing number of project values, so that formulas don't have to be rewritten every time a new project value is added to the data table? Thanks!
Hi
You should use the unpivot on the power query.
That way there is no need to rewrite
Regards
Miguel Félix
Proud to be a Super User!
Check out my blog: Power BI em PortuguêsHi @vutruong91 ,
The easist way is on the query editor, select the columns Project and choose unpivot columns. This is my recommend way.
However you can also do this in DAX you can do the following formula:
DAX_Table =
UNION (
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Projects_Dax;
"DESCRIPTION"; Projects_Dax[Description];
"VALUE"; Projects_Dax[Project A];
"FOR"; "Project A"
);
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Projects_Dax;
"DESCRIPTION"; Projects_Dax[Description];
"VALUE"; Projects_Dax[Project B];
"FOR"; "Project B"
);
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Projects_Dax;
"DESCRIPTION"; Projects_Dax[Description];
"VALUE"; Projects_Dax[Project C];
"FOR"; "Project C"
);
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Projects_Dax;
"DESCRIPTION"; Projects_Dax[Description];
"VALUE"; Projects_Dax[Project D];
"FOR"; "Project D"
)
)
Check attach the PBIX file with both options.
Regards,
MFelix
Regards
Miguel Félix
Proud to be a Super User!
Check out my blog: Power BI em Português
One way of manual unpivoting using DAX could be to select each column individually and then append it beneath other column
Table =
UNION (
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Table1,
"For", "Project A",
"Description", [Description],
"Value", [Project A]
),
SELECTCOLUMNS (
Table1,
"For", "Project B",
"Description", [Description],
"Value", [Project B]
)
)
If you love stickers, then you will definitely want to check out our Community Sticker Challenge!
Check out the January 2026 Power BI update to learn about new features.
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 70 | |
| 51 | |
| 42 | |
| 29 | |
| 22 |
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 142 | |
| 121 | |
| 56 | |
| 37 | |
| 32 |