Advance your Data & AI career with 50 days of live learning, dataviz contests, hands-on challenges, study groups & certifications and more!
Get registeredJoin 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.
I have a Product Suite table like this (Suites/Edition/Product Code&Name),
And I have a 2nd table for people who has competency level for different products,
What I want to see is, for each edition of each suite, who have competency level greater than 3 for all the products, something like this,
Any hint will be appreciated. Thank you!
Solved! Go to Solution.
I'm assuming you have a many to 1 relationship on Product Name between your 2 tables?
Assuming so, you could create a new table with something like:
= FILTER (
SUMMARIZE(Competency, Suites[Suite], Suites[ProductName], Competency[Name], "Competency Level", MAX(Competency[Level]),
[Competency Level] > 3
)
Though, I suspect you could skip the new table and just create a visual with appropriate filters, too.
I'm assuming you have a many to 1 relationship on Product Name between your 2 tables?
Assuming so, you could create a new table with something like:
= FILTER (
SUMMARIZE(Competency, Suites[Suite], Suites[ProductName], Competency[Name], "Competency Level", MAX(Competency[Level]),
[Competency Level] > 3
)
Though, I suspect you could skip the new table and just create a visual with appropriate filters, too.
Thanks @Anonymous for your answer.
Advance your Data & AI career with 50 days of live learning, contests, hands-on challenges, study groups & certifications and more!
Check out the October 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 79 | |
| 48 | |
| 35 | |
| 31 | |
| 27 |