Power BI is turning 10, and we’re marking the occasion with a special community challenge. Use your creativity to tell a story, uncover trends, or highlight something unexpected.
Get startedJoin us for an expert-led overview of the tools and concepts you'll need to become a Certified Power BI Data Analyst and pass exam PL-300. Register now.
Hi,
I'm migrating a Qliview dashboard to MS Power BI but there are some functions that Power BI does not have. One that is being used in the QV dashboard is LastWorkDate(start_date, no_of_days [, holidays]). That function returns the last working day after adding no_of_days to the start_date. Example:
LastWorkDate('19/10/2017', 2) // Will return '23/10/2017' because the 20th and 21st of october are not working days.
Also, if you specify holidays period, those days woyld be taken as not working days.
I need to convert expressions like:
IF(LastWorkDate(SHIPPING_DATE, 4)) < Floor($(varToday), "OPEN", "CLOSED")
But after searching in the forums and the Internet I cannot figure out how to put that conditional in a DAX expression for a Calculated Column.
If only we could create our custom functions...
THANKS IN ADVANCE!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi,
Instead of adding 4 days I've tried to add only 1 to the formula. But my surprise is that if use it for the day '23/10/2017', it returns '25/10/2017' instead of '24/10/2017'.
I've found the solution:
aux_LastWorkDate(SHIPPING_DATE) = CALCULATE( MIN(MyCalendar[Date]); FILTER( ALL(MyCalendar); MyCalendar[Date] >= (SHIPPING_DATE.[Date] + 1) && MyCalendar[isWorkDay] = 1 ) )
I don't know why this works as the date should is the same.
Hi @elxaxe,
First, you'll need to create an individual and continuous Date table if you don't have it yet.
Date = CALENDAR("2017/10/1","2017/12/31")
And add a column to the Date table that is 1 for workdays and 0 for non-workdays:
IsWorkday = SWITCH(WEEKDAY([Date]),1,0,7,0,1)
Then the DAX formula to convert LastWorkDate(SHIPPING_DATE, 4) in a calculate column should be like below.
=
VAR CURRENT_SHIPPING_DATE = SHIPPING_DATE RETURN CALCULATE ( MIN ( 'Date'[Date] ), FILTER ( ALL ( 'Date' ), 'Date'[Date] >= CURRENT_SHIPPING_DATE + 4 && 'Date'[IsWorkday] = 1 ) )
Regards
Thanks for the answer, @v-ljerr-msft !
Just a question from a noob like me: why are you using a variable? Wouldn't be the same if I write:
= CALCULATE ( MIN ( 'Date'[Date] ), FILTER ( ALL ( 'Date' ), 'Date'[Date] >= SHIPPING_DATE + 4 && 'Date'[IsWorkday] = 1 ) )
Hi @elxaxe,
Thanks for point that out! The formulas are the same, and it's simpler to use your formula in this scenario. It seems to be that I have been used to use the VAR functions to write DAX formulas.
Regards
Hi,
Instead of adding 4 days I've tried to add only 1 to the formula. But my surprise is that if use it for the day '23/10/2017', it returns '25/10/2017' instead of '24/10/2017'.
I've found the solution:
aux_LastWorkDate(SHIPPING_DATE) = CALCULATE( MIN(MyCalendar[Date]); FILTER( ALL(MyCalendar); MyCalendar[Date] >= (SHIPPING_DATE.[Date] + 1) && MyCalendar[isWorkDay] = 1 ) )
I don't know why this works as the date should is the same.
This is your chance to engage directly with the engineering team behind Fabric and Power BI. Share your experiences and shape the future.
Check out the June 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.
User | Count |
---|---|
79 | |
73 | |
58 | |
36 | |
32 |
User | Count |
---|---|
90 | |
62 | |
61 | |
49 | |
45 |