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

Join the Fabric FabCon Global Hackathon—running virtually through Nov 3. Open to all skill levels. $10,000 in prizes! Register now.

Reply
sewaktamang
Frequent Visitor

% Difference between two date value

Capture.PNG

 

How to get % Change between current Week and Previous Week?
Any solution ?

2 ACCEPTED SOLUTIONS

@sewaktamang

 

It gives me correct values

 

1019.png

 

 

Did you try this formula

 

Column =
VAR Priorday =
    CALCULATE (
        MAX ( TableName[Week] ),
        FILTER ( ALL ( TableName ), TableName[Week] < EARLIER ( TableName[Week] ) )
    )
RETURN
    DIVIDE (
        TableName[Conversions],
        CALCULATE (
            SUM ( TableName[Conversions] ),
            FILTER ( TableName, TableName[Week] = Priorday )
        )
    )
        - 1

 

View solution in original post

10 REPLIES 10
Zubair_Muhammad
Community Champion
Community Champion

@sewaktamang

 

If your Weeks are simple dates with 7 days gap then this calculated column should work

 

Colum =
VAR Priorday =
    PREVIOUSDAY ( TableName[Week] )
RETURN
    DIVIDE (
        TableName[Conversions],
        CALCULATE (
            SUM ( TableName[Conversions] ),
            FILTER ( TableName, TableName[Week] = Priorday )
        )
    )
        - 1

Capture.PNG 

 

It gives -100% @Zubair_Muhammad

Hi @sewaktamang

 

Please try with this minor modification (HIghlighted in RED below)

 

Colum =
VAR Priorday =
    PREVIOUSDAY ( TableName[Week] )
RETURN
    DIVIDE (
        TableName[Conversions],
        CALCULATE (
            SUM ( TableName[Conversions] ),
            FILTER ( ALL ( TableName ), TableName[Week] = Priorday )
        )
    )
        - 1

PREVIOUSDAY ( TableName[Week] )

THis is giving Empty Column  

@sewaktamang

 

my mistake. PreviousDays do not exist since there are gaps in dates

 

Please use the revised formula. I provided above. It shall work hopefully

It is giving me date value 😞

 

Column

Friday, 29 December 1899
Saturday, 30 December 1899
Saturday, 30 December 1899
Saturday, 30 December 1899
Saturday, 30 December 1899

@sewaktamang

 

It gives me correct values

 

1019.png

 

 

Did you try this formula

 

Column =
VAR Priorday =
    CALCULATE (
        MAX ( TableName[Week] ),
        FILTER ( ALL ( TableName ), TableName[Week] < EARLIER ( TableName[Week] ) )
    )
RETURN
    DIVIDE (
        TableName[Conversions],
        CALCULATE (
            SUM ( TableName[Conversions] ),
            FILTER ( TableName, TableName[Week] = Priorday )
        )
    )
        - 1

 

@sewaktamang

 

Could you show me the screenshot of your formula?

@sewaktamang

 

A small improvement to this formula so that you do not get -100% for firstweek/firstdate

HIghlighted in RED font below

 

Column =
VAR Priorday =
    CALCULATE (
        MAX ( TableName[Week] ),
        FILTER ( ALL ( TableName ), TableName[Week] < EARLIER ( TableName[Week] ) )
    )
RETURN
    IF (
        NOT ( ISBLANK ( Priorday ) ),
        DIVIDE (
            TableName[Conversions],
            CALCULATE (
                SUM ( TableName[Conversions] ),
                FILTER ( TableName, TableName[Week] = Priorday )
            )
        )
            - 1
    )

 

 

Hi @sewaktamang

 

My apologies.

 

Please use this formula

 

This will get you correct results

 

Column =
VAR Priorday =
    CALCULATE (
        MAX ( TableName[Week] ),
        FILTER ( ALL ( TableName ), TableName[Week] < EARLIER ( TableName[Week] ) )
    )
RETURN
    DIVIDE (
        TableName[Conversions],
        CALCULATE (
            SUM ( TableName[Conversions] ),
            FILTER ( TableName, TableName[Week] = Priorday )
        )
    )
        - 1

Helpful resources

Announcements
FabCon Global Hackathon Carousel

FabCon Global Hackathon

Join the Fabric FabCon Global Hackathon—running virtually through Nov 3. Open to all skill levels. $10,000 in prizes!

September Power BI Update Carousel

Power BI Monthly Update - September 2025

Check out the September 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.

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.

Top Solution Authors
Top Kudoed Authors