Advance your Data & AI career with 50 days of live learning, dataviz contests, hands-on challenges, study groups & certifications and more!
Get registeredJoin 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.
I have to analyze one table Sales orders based on an older Sales table data. So for each record in the new table I have to find the closest delivered Sales order LastSO (primary key). I grouped the old Sales order in a table based on Customer Date and Maximum RecId for each date. There are no duplicate Deliver date/time and LastSO records. When I created a column ClosestSO as follows:
ClosestSO = LOOKUPVALUE(MaxRecIdByDateByCust[LastSO],
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Invoice account],NewOrders[Cust2Choose],
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time],LASTDATE
(FILTER
(ALL(MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time]),
(MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time])<=NewOrders[DeliveryDate]
)
)
)
I only get one record. Any idea why. I used the same logic for Exchange rates and it worked well
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @rabih,
My mistake. ![]()
Could you try the formula below to see if it works?
ClosestSO =
LOOKUPVALUE (
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[LastSO],
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Invoice account], NewOrders[Cust2Choose],
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time], CALCULATE (
LASTDATE ( MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time] ),
FILTER (
ALL ( MaxRecIdByDateByCust ),
( MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time] ) <= NewOrders[DeliveryDate]
&& MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Invoice account] = NewOrders[Cust2Choose]
)
)
)
Regards
Hi @rabih,
Could you try using the formula below to see if it works? ![]()
ClosestSO =
LOOKUPVALUE (
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[LastSO],
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Invoice account], NewOrders[Cust2Choose],
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time], LASTDATE (
FILTER (
ALL ( MaxRecIdByDateByCust ),
( MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time] ) <= NewOrders[DeliveryDate]
&& MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Invoice account] = NewOrders[Cust2Choose]
)
)
)
Regards
I have copied and pasted your code snippet.
Got following error:
Something's wrong with one or more fields:(NewOrders) ClosestSO:
A table expression containing more than one column was specified in the call to function 'LASTDATE'. This is not supported.
Hi @rabih,
My mistake. ![]()
Could you try the formula below to see if it works?
ClosestSO =
LOOKUPVALUE (
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[LastSO],
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Invoice account], NewOrders[Cust2Choose],
MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time], CALCULATE (
LASTDATE ( MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time] ),
FILTER (
ALL ( MaxRecIdByDateByCust ),
( MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Delivery date/time] ) <= NewOrders[DeliveryDate]
&& MaxRecIdByDateByCust[Invoice account] = NewOrders[Cust2Choose]
)
)
)
Regards
You nailed it 🙂
Join the Fabric FabCon Global Hackathon—running virtually through Nov 3. Open to all skill levels. $10,000 in prizes!
Check out the October 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.