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

We've captured the moments from FabCon & SQLCon that everyone is talking about, and we are bringing them to the community, live and on-demand. Starts on April 14th. Register now

Reply
Anonymous
Not applicable

Count of items by date on Line Chart

I have a list of items with a history and I want to get a count of specific type of item (bug) for each date and status to show a trend

 

This query works great to sum up  all my items

Dev Complete =

   IF ( Contains (LineTableVisibility,LineTableVisibility[ID], 3 ),

      CALCULATE(

          SUM(AllWorkItems[Story Points]),

             FILTER(ALLSELECTED(AllWorkItems[Date],AllWorkItems[State] ),

                 AllWorkItems[Date] <= MAX(AllWorkItems[Date])  &&

                 AllWorkItems[State] in { "CLOSED" , "ACCEPTED", "READY FOR TEST", "IN TEST", "RESOLVED", "NEXT ER"}

         )

     ),

   Blank()

   )

 

But What if i just wnat to get a count of how many there are for each day.    I have tried this but it just gets the same total for every day

 

TotalBugCountByDate =

CALCULATE(

      COUNT(AllWorkItems[Work Item Type]),

            FILTER(ALLSELECTED(AllWorkItems[Date],AllWorkItems[State],AllWorkItems[Work Item Type] ),

            AllWorkItems[Date] <= MAX(AllWorkItems[Date]) &&

            AllWorkItems[State] in {"New","Resolved","Fixed","Fix_Pending","CLOSED","Open","Verification_Pending"} &&

            AllWorkItems[Work Item Type] = "Bug"

         )

   )

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
Anonymous
Not applicable

HI @Anonymous,

You can try to use the following measure formula if it helps:

TotalBugCountByDate =
CALCULATE (
    COUNT ( AllWorkItems[Work Item Type] ),
    FILTER (
        ALLSELECTED ( AllWorkItems ),
        AllWorkItems[Date] <= MAX ( AllWorkItems[Date] )
            && AllWorkItems[State]
            IN {
            "New",
            "Resolved",
            "Fixed",
            "Fix_Pending",
            "CLOSED",
            "Open",
            "Verification_Pending"
        }
            && AllWorkItems[Work Item Type] = "Bug"
    ),
    VALUES ( AllWorkItems[Date] ),
    VALUES ( AllWorkItems[State] )
)

If the above also not hlep, can you please share a pbix or some dummy data that keep the raw data structure with expected results? It should help us clarify your scenario and test to coding formula.

How to Get Your Question Answered Quickly  

Regards,

Xiaoxin Sheng

View solution in original post

4 REPLIES 4
danextian
Super User
Super User

Hi @Anonymous ,

 

You can do something like

=
CALCULATE (
    SUM ( table[value] ),
    ALLEXCEPT ( table, table[column1], table[column2] )
)




Dane Belarmino | Microsoft MVP | Proud to be a Super User!

Did I answer your question? Mark my post as a solution!


"Tell me and I’ll forget; show me and I may remember; involve me and I’ll understand."
Need Power BI consultation, get in touch with me on LinkedIn or hire me on UpWork.
Learn with me on YouTube @DAXJutsu or follow my page on Facebook @DAXJutsuPBI.
Anonymous
Not applicable

my table has a lot of colums and I am not looking for a sum..  I am I just want a count.   of the items by a specific type

 

Anonymous
Not applicable

HI @Anonymous,

You can try to use the following measure formula if it helps:

TotalBugCountByDate =
CALCULATE (
    COUNT ( AllWorkItems[Work Item Type] ),
    FILTER (
        ALLSELECTED ( AllWorkItems ),
        AllWorkItems[Date] <= MAX ( AllWorkItems[Date] )
            && AllWorkItems[State]
            IN {
            "New",
            "Resolved",
            "Fixed",
            "Fix_Pending",
            "CLOSED",
            "Open",
            "Verification_Pending"
        }
            && AllWorkItems[Work Item Type] = "Bug"
    ),
    VALUES ( AllWorkItems[Date] ),
    VALUES ( AllWorkItems[State] )
)

If the above also not hlep, can you please share a pbix or some dummy data that keep the raw data structure with expected results? It should help us clarify your scenario and test to coding formula.

How to Get Your Question Answered Quickly  

Regards,

Xiaoxin Sheng

Anonymous
Not applicable

HI @Anonymous,

Can you please share some dummy data with expected results? They should help us clarify your data structure and test to coding formula.

How to Get Your Question Answered Quickly - Microsoft Power BI Community

Regards,

Moonlight

Helpful resources

Announcements
New to Fabric survey Carousel

New to Fabric Survey

If you have recently started exploring Fabric, we'd love to hear how it's going. Your feedback can help with product improvements.

Power BI DataViz World Championships carousel

Power BI DataViz World Championships - June 2026

A new Power BI DataViz World Championship is coming this June! Don't miss out on submitting your entry.

Join our Fabric User Panel

Join our Fabric User Panel

Share feedback directly with Fabric product managers, participate in targeted research studies and influence the Fabric roadmap.

March Power BI Update Carousel

Power BI Community Update - March 2026

Check out the March 2026 Power BI update to learn about new features.