Check your eligibility for this 50% exam voucher offer and join us for free live learning sessions to get prepared for Exam DP-700.
Get StartedDon't miss out! 2025 Microsoft Fabric Community Conference, March 31 - April 2, Las Vegas, Nevada. Use code MSCUST for a $150 discount. Prices go up February 11th. Register now.
Hello,
I have a table including all the students enrolled in a university course, and need to obtain the number of those who attended certain schools (identified by the prefix "school").
To do so, all I need is to FILTER the "SchoolName" field inside a CALCULATE expression, in order to count only those values starting with the word "school", adding an asterisk as a wild character after the word "school".
Therefore I wrote the following:
Solved! Go to Solution.
@giovissimo there is no concept of wildcard, you can do something like this
Students = CALCULATE([Students], FILTER(ALL(Course[SchoolName]),LEFT(Course[SchoolName],5)="School"))
Students = CALCULATE([Students], FILTER(ALL(Course[SchoolName]),CONTAINSSTRING(Course[SchoolName],"School"))
Check my latest blog post Compare Budgeted Scenarios vs. Actuals I would ❤ Kudos if my solution helped. 👉 If you can spend time posting the question, you can also make efforts to give Kudos to whoever helped to solve your problem. It is a token of appreciation!
⚡Visit us at https://perytus.com, your one-stop-shop for Power BI-related projects/training/consultancy.⚡
Subscribe to the @PowerBIHowTo YT channel for an upcoming video on List and Record functions in Power Query!!
Learn Power BI and Fabric - subscribe to our YT channel - Click here: @PowerBIHowTo
If my solution proved useful, I'd be delighted to receive Kudos. When you put effort into asking a question, it's equally thoughtful to acknowledge and give Kudos to the individual who helped you solve the problem. It's a small gesture that shows appreciation and encouragement! ❤
Did I answer your question? Mark my post as a solution. Proud to be a Super User! Appreciate your Kudos 🙂
Feel free to email me with any of your BI needs.
Thank you very much !
@giovissimo there is no concept of wildcard, you can do something like this
Students = CALCULATE([Students], FILTER(ALL(Course[SchoolName]),LEFT(Course[SchoolName],5)="School"))
Students = CALCULATE([Students], FILTER(ALL(Course[SchoolName]),CONTAINSSTRING(Course[SchoolName],"School"))
Check my latest blog post Compare Budgeted Scenarios vs. Actuals I would ❤ Kudos if my solution helped. 👉 If you can spend time posting the question, you can also make efforts to give Kudos to whoever helped to solve your problem. It is a token of appreciation!
⚡Visit us at https://perytus.com, your one-stop-shop for Power BI-related projects/training/consultancy.⚡
Subscribe to the @PowerBIHowTo YT channel for an upcoming video on List and Record functions in Power Query!!
Learn Power BI and Fabric - subscribe to our YT channel - Click here: @PowerBIHowTo
If my solution proved useful, I'd be delighted to receive Kudos. When you put effort into asking a question, it's equally thoughtful to acknowledge and give Kudos to the individual who helped you solve the problem. It's a small gesture that shows appreciation and encouragement! ❤
Did I answer your question? Mark my post as a solution. Proud to be a Super User! Appreciate your Kudos 🙂
Feel free to email me with any of your BI needs.
User | Count |
---|---|
116 | |
73 | |
60 | |
48 | |
48 |
User | Count |
---|---|
171 | |
122 | |
60 | |
59 | |
56 |