Skip to main content
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Enhance your career with this limited time 50% discount on Fabric and Power BI exams. Ends August 31st. Request your voucher.

Reply
rachaelwalker
Resolver III
Resolver III

Power BI Group By Using DAX Calculated column

Hello, I am looking for a DAX formula that must be a calculated column due to the visual requirements. This is for a scheduling calendar. I have the Start of Week, Technician, and the projects they are assigned to for that week seperated by a comma. I only want one row per techncian per week. I figured it out using a measure but I need it to be a column for the visual to work. When I paste my measure formula into calculated column it no longer works. Is there a summarize or group by formula that I could use?

(i do not want to do this in power query because I want to maintain the relationship to a project details table)

 

Measure is below

Jobs = CONCATENATEX(VALUES('Schedule Details'[Job Number]), 'Schedule Details'[Job Number], ", ")

rachaelwalker_0-1723560815523.png

 

2 ACCEPTED SOLUTIONS
SamWiseOwl
Super User
Super User

Hi @rachaelwalker 

When you have a visual it automatically applies filters based on the columns in the visual.

In tables this doesn't occur and we have to create those filters.

You could create a column in the same table or create a new calculated table.

I've assumed you are staying in the same table for now.

 

Schedule columns =

var personname = 'Schedule Details'[Name] --Capture the person

var datestar = 'Schedule Details'[Date Start of week] --Capture the date

return

Calculate( --apply filters
CONCATENATEX(VALUES('Schedule Details'[Job Number]), 'Schedule Details'[Job Number], ", ")
,All('Schedule Details') --Return all rows

,'Schedule Details'[Name] = personname ,  'Schedule Details'[Date Start of week] = datestar)
--filter to the original rows person and date

 

My data is a little sillier than yours...

SamWiseOwl_0-1723562090736.png

 


If you are happy with this answer please mark as a solution for others to find !

Kudos are always appreciated! Check out our free Power BI video courses.

View solution in original post

@rachaelwalker if you wanted a table it would be something like this.
Home - New Table 

New Table =
SUMMARIZECOLUMNS('Schedule Details'[Name],  'Schedule Details'[Date Start of week] ,"Job list",


    CONCATENATEX(values('Schedule Details'[Job Number]), [Job Number],", ")
)

 

SamWiseOwl_0-1723562393077.png

 


If you are happy with this answer please mark as a solution for others to find !

Kudos are always appreciated! Check out our free Power BI video courses.

View solution in original post

5 REPLIES 5
SamWiseOwl
Super User
Super User

Hi @rachaelwalker 

When you have a visual it automatically applies filters based on the columns in the visual.

In tables this doesn't occur and we have to create those filters.

You could create a column in the same table or create a new calculated table.

I've assumed you are staying in the same table for now.

 

Schedule columns =

var personname = 'Schedule Details'[Name] --Capture the person

var datestar = 'Schedule Details'[Date Start of week] --Capture the date

return

Calculate( --apply filters
CONCATENATEX(VALUES('Schedule Details'[Job Number]), 'Schedule Details'[Job Number], ", ")
,All('Schedule Details') --Return all rows

,'Schedule Details'[Name] = personname ,  'Schedule Details'[Date Start of week] = datestar)
--filter to the original rows person and date

 

My data is a little sillier than yours...

SamWiseOwl_0-1723562090736.png

 


If you are happy with this answer please mark as a solution for others to find !

Kudos are always appreciated! Check out our free Power BI video courses.

Thank you so much!! This worked for me and I appreciate the helpful comments explaining it as well!!

@rachaelwalker if you wanted a table it would be something like this.
Home - New Table 

New Table =
SUMMARIZECOLUMNS('Schedule Details'[Name],  'Schedule Details'[Date Start of week] ,"Job list",


    CONCATENATEX(values('Schedule Details'[Job Number]), [Job Number],", ")
)

 

SamWiseOwl_0-1723562393077.png

 


If you are happy with this answer please mark as a solution for others to find !

Kudos are always appreciated! Check out our free Power BI video courses.

Is there any particular reason I would want to use a table over a column? This was helpful as well. I ended up using a column but I have this formula saved. 

The column can't remove the duplicate rows, since each job list is separate. Using the grouped table created by summarize would.


If you are happy with this answer please mark as a solution for others to find !

Kudos are always appreciated! Check out our free Power BI video courses.

Helpful resources

Announcements
July 2025 community update carousel

Fabric Community Update - July 2025

Find out what's new and trending in the Fabric community.

July PBI25 Carousel

Power BI Monthly Update - July 2025

Check out the July 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.