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Ever wonder why some questions get answered so quickly while others languish or are seemingly completely ignored? Fear not, this article will help guide you into getting your question answered quickly by the Community.
Introduction
This article contains numerous suggestions and recommendations that will help you get your particular question about Power BI, PowerAutomate and PowerApps answered quickly and correctly versus seemingly ignored.
First off all, before anything, be sure to check the community Code of Conduct.
Urgent Issues
First and foremost, the community is a "best effort" kind of support forum. There are no true guarantees or service level agreements (SLA's) regarding when you might get an answer. You may not get an answer. Don't get me wrong, the community is an incrediblely robust and an amazing resource but if you are having an urgent issue that needs addressed immediately, you need to get actual Microsoft support involved. To do this, open a support ticket here:
Power BI - https://support.powerbi.com
PowerAutomate - https://flow.microsoft.com/support
Power Apps - https://support.powerapps.com
Do a Little Research
Before posting your question, use the Search functionality to search for an existing answer to your issue. These forums have been around for awhile and there is a good chance that somebody else has had your issue and that it was solved by the community. This is the fastest way to get your question answered because the answer already exists. I literally have macros defined for about 10 different questions that get asked again and again on the forums that provide a nice standard answer with links to the solution. So, yes, it happens quite a bit. Search is your friend.
Post in the Correct Forum
This may seem elementary, but choose your forum wisely. Some top answerers regularly peruse the "All Topics" view of the forums, but not everyone. Some of the top answerers are more specialized. For example, I do not answer much in the Developer forums because I do not do a ton of custom, hard-core Development. But other answerers pretty much only do Development and that is the only forum they follow. Also, posting a question in the wrong forum will create confusion on the part of the answerer. For example, posting a question in the Power BI Service forum for a Power BI Desktop question will have the answerer thinking how the issue is solved in the Service, not the Desktop.
Don't Cross Post
Cross posting is considered rude and wasteful and it has been so since the dawn of forums. Don't do it. Again, some answerers use the "All Topics" view of the forums and then we see 5 posts with the same title and question. Which one do we answer? Bottom line, some community members will not answer a cross posted topic on principle alone. If you are not sure where to post your question, use the "General" forum.
Be Nice
The vast majority of the community are volunteers with day jobs. Being rude or complaining about Power BI, PowerAutomate, PowerApps or Microsoft will not make answerers endeavor to help you. And when the answerer misunderstands your question and gives you the wrong answer, be nice and polite and inform them that they misunderstood and re-explain what you were going for. Being terse and such will, again, not encourage answerers to endeavor to help you. I have not seen it on this site, but I have known some members in other similar communities that kept lists of other members that they would just rather not deal with.
Post Sample Data
UPDATE: @ImkeF wrote a fantastic article for the best way to post data to the forums: https://community.powerbi.com/t5/Community-Blog/How-to-provide-sample-data-in-the-Power-BI-Forum/ba-....
I cannot stress this one enough. That's why it is in red. If you have a question about something that just isn't working right, post as much information as you can, starting with your data. Scrub it if you have to, but post it. It makes things SO much easier to understand and replicate the problem. Plus, answerers will be more inclined to answer your question if they can quickly copy the data and start figuring out the solution. Even better, the answerer can give you back an answer using your very own column names instead of "SomeTable" and "SomeColumn". This means that you can just copy and paste the answer (if it involves a formula) into your own model and not have to monkey with it. PowerApps, PowerAutomate and Power BI all deal with data at some level so make sure to post examples of the data you are working with.
Attachments
You know what is even better than posting sample data as text? Posting the actual file that you are working with! Obviously this cannot be done in all cases due to privacy issues but if you can recreate your issue with a sample file and attach the sample file to your post, this is a fantastic way to speed up the process of getting to a resolution.
When Posting Data, Put it in a Nice Format
The easier that you make it for answerers to copy your sample data directly from your post and paste it into Excel or an "Enter Data" query, the more likely and faster that you going to get responses. Think about it, if you paste your data in an unfriendly format or as a picture, the answerer is going to have to key in all of the data by hand to recreate your model. Thus, the odds of you getting an answer in a timely manner drastically decreases.
The most tried and true method that I have found is to copy and paste data from Excel into the post. You will get an error posting the first time about invalid HTML and such, but just hit the post button again and your data will be in a nice table within the post that can be simply copied and pasted into an "Enter Data" query or back into Excel. The next best thing is to format your data as a comma separated file (CSV). Again, very simple to copy and paste into Notepad and save as a CSV file that can then be easily referenced in a CSV query. Oh, and one last thing, include your headers!
Include Your Relationships
Here is where posting a picture is the perfect solution. Take a screen shot of the relationship pane and upload the image to your post. Failing that, use proper notation to explain your relationships, such as:
SomeTable SomeOtherTable
SomeColumn 1:* SomeOther Column
SomeTable SomeOtherTable
SomeColumn 1:1 SomeOtherColumn
The first denotes a one-to-many relationship, the other a one-to-one relationship. Use * for the many, use 1 for the 1.
Here is an excellent way to post your data model visually courtesy of @Anonymous :
Include Your Formulas
It is very helpful to explain what you are trying to do as this provides context to the problem, however, don't forget to post the formulas that you are having problems with. And, for bonus points, put them in a code block. That's the page icon with the "</>" in the middle of it next to the smiley icon when creating a post. This helps draw the answerer's eye to the formula and makes it easy to know exactly what to copy and paste into their own test model.
If you are posting code, run your code through a beautifier like:
Include Your Expected Result
If you are looking to create a particular visual, table or form that calculates data a particular way, by all means, include an example of the visual or the expected results of a calculation in your post. Even if you have to mock it up in Paint or something or simple text, something is better than nothing. This will help the answerer understand exactly the result that you are trying to achieve instead of going down the wrong path. It is even better if the expected results that you post are for the sample data that you post. This means that an answerer can take your data, create the solution and then cross check that back with what you are expecting.
Don't Bother Posting Correlation ID Errors
This may seem a little harsh, but posting a picture like the one above and asking what is wrong is essentially a waste of everyone's time. Why? Because none of us speak Correlation ID or GUID either. There's simply no information upon which we can act to give you an answer. If you post one of these, the answer that will come back will likely be something along the lines of:
"I suggest that you contact support."
The exception to this advice is if you are asking a question about something that worked yesterday and now does not (for example) and the way to preface that image is something like:
"Hey, yesterday when I did <this>, everything was fine, but now every time I try to do <this>, I get this error. Is anyone else seeing this kind of error (see below) <insert screen shot>"
Or the classic:
"Hey I'm trying to do <this> and keep getting the error below, has anyone gotten this to work? <insert screen shot>"
Again, nobody can speak Correlation ID or GUID, but we CAN attempt to replicate the particular issue you are having and help confirm or deny whether or not it is a general issue or just you. 🙂
The people that CAN speak Correlation ID are the fine folks at Microsoft since they have access to the logs. You can go to https://support.powerbi.com, https://support.powerapps.com or https://flow.microsoft.com/support and open a support ticket.
SQL Code
Please don't just post your SQL Code and say "How do I do this in ..." OK, think about this, this is like me pasting in some assembly code and asking you "How do you do this in C#?" If you don't read assembly code, it will be difficult to answer the question. Just because SQL and DAX are both querying languages does not mean that they work the same or that people that understand one understand the other. If you must post SQL code, include a plain language explanation of what you are trying to accomplish. Because, this doesn't help...
How do I do this in C#?
segment .data
count dw 0
value db 15
segment .text
inc [count]
dec [value]
mov ebx, count
inc word [ebx]
mov esi, value
dec byte [esi]
Issues
If you have found a true bug or issue, you can make a post to the forum to let others know (and that would be very nice of you to do so). But if you want to get it fixed, you should post it in the Issues/Ideas (it varies) area of the community. Specifically, you should post it here:
Power BI - https://community.powerbi.com/t5/Issues/idb-p/Issues
PowerAutomate - https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/I-Found-A-Bug/bd-p/BugFound
PowerApps - https://ideas.powerapps.com
Ideas
If you have a new idea for functionality or how something should work, you can certainly start a thread on the community to solicit feedback on your idea, but you should also post the idea in the ideas section of the website and solicit others to vote on your idea. The development teams use the Ideas area of the communities to build their development pipeline and a significant amount of weight is placed on Ideas that have lots of votes versus those that do not. The ideas areas of the communities are here:
Power BI - https://ideas.powerbi.com
PowerAutomate - https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Flow-Ideas/idb-p/FlowIdeas
PowerApps - https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/PowerApps-Ideas/idb-p/PowerAppsIdeas
Be Concise
Brevity is a wonderful thing in forum postings. The best questions are those that provide a brief overview of what the poster is trying to achieve and then post their data, relationships, formulas and expected output. If you post in this way, if there is an answer to be had, you will get an answer.
Example
Below is an example of an exemplary post that is sure to be answered. The example is for Power BI but the same tenants hold true for a question in any of the forums.
I’m having trouble “thinking in DAX” WRT describing proportions.
I have two tables.
Dictionary
Category |
Issue |
GENERAL |
General - OTHER Issues |
GENERAL |
General – Vague issues |
Startup |
Startup - Other Issues |
Ports |
USB Port - Physical damage |
Internet/Connectivity |
Wi-Fi - Vague Issue |
Verbatims
UUID |
Unpivoted_Issues |
5a6b5a614e593f722a24736c39 |
General - OTHER Issues |
3e2b46627b51763b556b5b2d2e |
General – Vague issues |
654e434370456f4c2d6455496c |
General - OTHER Issues |
654e434370456f4c2d6455496c |
USB Port - Physical damage |
654e434370456f4c2d6455496c |
Startup - Other Issues |
2d3e5e557c4e4373592754275f |
Wi-Fi - Vague Issue |
6a7b3255424430656a6e7a5329 |
USB Port - Physical damage |
6a7b3255424430656a6e7a5329 |
General - OTHER Issues |
4b394832746520534c2165794f |
USB Port - Physical damage |
I need to produce visualizations that show the proportions of issues within categories by unique respondents.
I didn’t have trouble coming up with a visualization for % of issues by unique respondents or count of issues within their categories but I can’t seem to get my arms around this one.
What I am expecting are results like:
Category | Count of Issues | % of issues by Distinct UUID |
GENERAL | 4 | 67% |
Ports | 3 | 50% |
Startup | 1 | 17% |
Internet/Connectivity | 1 | 17% |
Where: Distinctcount(Verbatims)[UUID] = 6
Conclusion
I can't promise you that you will get your question answered to your satisfaction and yes, putting a question into the format of the example above takes a little bit of work. However, it is often the case that when you sit down to frame out the question properly you end up finding the answer on your own, and that's way better, faster and far less frustrating than writing a poorly worded question and sitting around helplessly while it gets ignored! Bottom line, putting in a little extra effort into the framing of the question will go a long way to getting your question answered or issue resolved as quickly as possible and that's really what the community is all about.
Can you maybe open a new post and log this info there? This will help visibility and everyone on the community can assist quicker
Hello
My name is Ahmetcan Tanık. I live in Turkey also working as a dataAnalytics manager in HDI Fibaemeklilik PensionFund and Insureance Company. I am a Power BI admin and I love using Power bi. I would like to ask you about an improvement.
In the visiulations ve have the filter slicer. It has a search box property when you click 3 dots (...) Bu after searching something we can just make a single selection. Is it possible that after typing selection word and click enter, would it filter all clicked word.
Example :
Search box : Ahmet
Results
(selectted)Ahmetcan
(selectted)AhmetTanık
(selectted)Ahmetist
Open a new ticket sir. I will assist
To use special characters in a column name, enclose the entire name in brackets ( [] ) and add a ] to any closing brackets in the name.
I don't understand this instruction. What does it say? When creating a column must I just =( [] ) ] then it's done?
Try following in Power Editor
Text.Select([Your Field Name],{"a".."z","A".."Z","0".."9"," "})
In Query Editor, what will be the result if you combine a text string with a null value?
I firmly believe it will be a text string.
Is it correct?
Please help
I agree
Hello @Greg_Deckler,
Maybe we Should add to the list to use english language since it's the most used language between all coutries, because I'm finding it hard to help with cases that's with other lagnuages.
If I answered your question, please mark my post as solution, Appreciate your Kudos 👍
Proud to be a Super User! | |
Agree with you
Hi greg
A very useful help for new users (like me).
I'll immediately correct my post!
Hi all,
I am new beginner of Power Query. My current raw data (1st screenshot below) consists of column headers (Column D - P) without [Year Name].
I manually added in [2022] in Query Editor for all months (Jan - Dec). However, when come to next year, i will have to do the similiar manual exercise to replace col. header with [2023], which bit inefficient.
wonder if any better way which i can dynamic col. header name in P.Query Editor, base on [Year] selection from excel cell A1, and concentrate with [Month]?
anyone willing to help?
Hi
I have one table which I have uploaded to power bi. In the table there is a column called indicator and in this column there are serveral indicator names. Is there a calulation that allows me to use the table name column name indicator name in the column and divide the numerator & denominator for the coresponding indicator?
Thanks for sharing the deep and amazing article. I think you must use a Unique Prompt Generator for your article so that it reaches a wider audience. People answer quickly because they are more likely to know the answer. They are more likely to get a checkmark on their profile. Can you please advise how can an attachment (e.g. a .xlsx or .docx file) be added to a post? I see options to add images and media files.
Woah, thx
You can use a onedrive, google drive, we transfer or similar link to upload your files.
Regards
Miguel Félix
Proud to be a Super User!
Check out my blog: Power BI em PortuguêsHola, Tengo la siguiente tabla donde se toma registros en dos horas diferentes del día (Mañana y tarde), requiero seleccionar solamente el último registro del día, agradezco su valiosa ayuda
Hola!
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