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Hi all,
Apologies if this has already been answered - I was only able to find single-column iterative/looping examples, not entire query results - but I'm basically looking to use a prinary key from one OData query ("Companies") to then run and merge another query ("GL Entries").
The query that pulls the list of companies:
let
Source = OData.Feed(http://www.api.abc.com/companylist, null, [Implementation="2.0"]),
#"Filtered Rows" = Table.SelectRows(Source, each not Text.Contains([Name], "Test"))
in
#"Filtered Rows"The query that runs and gets the entries:
(CompanyFilter as text) =>
let
//Variables
BaseURL = "https://www.api.com/",
InstanceID = "123456-abcdef-7483743",
QueryName = "GLEntries",
CompanyParameter = "/?company=",
ConcatenatedURL = BaseURL & InstanceID & "/" & QueryName & "/" & CompanyParameter & CompanyFilter,
//Source
Source = OData.Feed(ConcatenatedURL, null, [Implementation="2.0"]),
#"Added Custom" = Table.AddColumn(Source, "CompanyID", each CompanyFilter)
in
#"Added Custom"How would I go about passing the company name value from the first query as a parameter into the second query and then merging all the results?
Solved! Go to Solution.
@Anonymous ,
You can create a custom function using the first query and then invoke the query in the second function. About how to create custom function, you can refer to doc and blogs below.
https://radacad.com/writing-custom-functions-in-power-query-m
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/mvpawardprogram/2013/08/19/creating-power-query-functions/
Community Support Team _ Jimmy Tao
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.
@Anonymous ,
You can create a custom function using the first query and then invoke the query in the second function. About how to create custom function, you can refer to doc and blogs below.
https://radacad.com/writing-custom-functions-in-power-query-m
https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/mvpawardprogram/2013/08/19/creating-power-query-functions/
Community Support Team _ Jimmy Tao
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.
Thank you -- I suppose I was trying to overengineer it by using loops and other iterative functions when it really is as easy as adding a custom invoked-function column.
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