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Anonymous
Not applicable

How to add a Conditional Column in Power Query based on a Shift Pattern?

 
1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

First step is to bring your data into usable format

 

lbendlin_0-1704582013632.png

and then you can add the column in the Faults table.

 

lbendlin_1-1704582958887.png

 

Note that I modified your sample data as it was missing the "before 7am"  scenario.

 

 

View solution in original post

9 REPLIES 9
lbendlin
Super User
Super User

Why would you need this in Power Query?  Seems to be much simpler and more flexible to implement that in the UI.

Anonymous
Not applicable

.

UI = User Interface. What your report users interact with.

Anonymous
Not applicable

.

Please provide sample data that covers your issue or question completely, in a usable format (not as a screenshot).

Do not include sensitive information or anything not related to the issue or question.

If you are unsure how to upload data please refer to https://community.fabric.microsoft.com/t5/Community-Blog/How-to-provide-sample-data-in-the-Power-BI-...

 

Anonymous
Not applicable

.

First step is to bring your data into usable format

 

lbendlin_0-1704582013632.png

and then you can add the column in the Faults table.

 

lbendlin_1-1704582958887.png

 

Note that I modified your sample data as it was missing the "before 7am"  scenario.

 

 

Anonymous
Not applicable

.

Power Query doesn't really like nested "each"  statements, it is hard to keep track of the scope.  So it is simpler to use explicit functions instead.  "k"  is a random name for "current row of the outer scope"  and you can reference it inside the function.

 

{0}  is just saying "give me the first row of the Table.SelectRows".  You could have used Table.First or other methods too.

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