Microsoft is giving away 50,000 FREE Microsoft Certification exam vouchers!
Enter the sweepstakes now!Prepping for a Fabric certification exam? Join us for a live prep session with exam experts to learn how to pass the exam. Register now.
Hi @BenGWeeks ,
If [Area] is a determined value,
Try below measure:
AVERAGE=CALCULATE(AVERAGE(DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]),FILTER(ALL('DevOpsAssessmentResponses'),DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]="XXXXX"))
If [Area] is dynamic,
Try below measure:
AVERAGE=CALCULATE(AVERAGE(DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]),FILTER(ALL('DevOpsAssessmentResponses'),DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]=MAX(DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]))
Best Regards,
Kelly
Did I answer your question? Mark my post as a solution!
Hi @BenGWeeks ,
If [Area] is a determined value,
Try below measure:
AVERAGE=CALCULATE(AVERAGE(DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]),FILTER(ALL('DevOpsAssessmentResponses'),DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]="XXXXX"))
If [Area] is dynamic,
Try below measure:
AVERAGE=CALCULATE(AVERAGE(DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]),FILTER(ALL('DevOpsAssessmentResponses'),DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]=MAX(DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]))
Best Regards,
Kelly
Did I answer your question? Mark my post as a solution!
Use SELECTEDVALUE() or MIN() / MAX() etc depending if you care about totals being meaningful.
You need to capture SELECTEDVALUE before you do CALCULATE(), by assigning a variable. below example illustrates the point but is a bit useless as the "current row" is already in the context, so it is not necessary to filter like this.
AVERAGE =
var a = SELECTEDVALUE(DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area])
return CALCULATE(AVERAGE(something something),DevOpsAssessmentResponses[Area]=a)
User | Count |
---|---|
84 | |
70 | |
68 | |
58 | |
50 |
User | Count |
---|---|
43 | |
41 | |
34 | |
34 | |
30 |