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!The Power BI Data Visualization World Championships is back! Get ahead of the game and start preparing now! Learn more
Hi,
I'm creating a resource report that uses following tables: one listing each resource name and their manager names, and the other one is assignment table records with assignment_id, date, manager_status, week start date, end date, resource name, hours_worked. One to many relationships between resource and assignment table using resource name.
The report displays a table with the resource name, manager name, week start date, manager_status, and hours_worked. When a week(week start date) is selected in the slicer, the table will show the assignments submitted that week. If a resource hasn't submitted an assignment, the fields for "worked hours" and "manager status" are blank because no data exists in the backend.
My goal is to replace these blanks with "N/A" to indicate missing submissions. Additionally, I want to count these "N/A" entries and display the total in a card.
The check here is there is no data available at the backend to make the changes, because will get entires once resources submitted their assignment sheet.
Can anyone guide me on how to set this up?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @RKK ,
I worked on a similar report setup recently. We had a User table (containing all user data) and a DailyTimesheet table that captured daily timesheet entries. If a user didn’t submit a timesheet for a particular day, no entry existed, similar to your case.
Initially, we used measures to mark missing entries as “Entry Missing,” but this approach complicated calculations and analysis.
Instead, we did the following:
This approach provided a complete view of timesheet data, including missing entries, making it easier to analyze. I recommend a similar setup in your case.
Let me know if you need further help! 😊
Proud to be a Super User! Regards, Bipin Lala | Business Intelligence Developer | |
Hi @RKK ,
I worked on a similar report setup recently. We had a User table (containing all user data) and a DailyTimesheet table that captured daily timesheet entries. If a user didn’t submit a timesheet for a particular day, no entry existed, similar to your case.
Initially, we used measures to mark missing entries as “Entry Missing,” but this approach complicated calculations and analysis.
Instead, we did the following:
This approach provided a complete view of timesheet data, including missing entries, making it easier to analyze. I recommend a similar setup in your case.
Let me know if you need further help! 😊
Proud to be a Super User! Regards, Bipin Lala | Business Intelligence Developer | |
Check out the November 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.
Advance your Data & AI career with 50 days of live learning, contests, hands-on challenges, study groups & certifications and more!
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 58 | |
| 43 | |
| 41 | |
| 23 | |
| 17 |
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 188 | |
| 118 | |
| 96 | |
| 64 | |
| 45 |