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Welcome to the October 2024 update!
We have a lot of exciting updates to share with you this month.
Quick measure suggestions with Copilot to be replaced with Microsoft Fabric Copilot, we have an update with Azure Map - Data Bound Reference Layers, and a preview of New List Slicer.
There’s a lot more to discover, so read on to see all we have for you this month.
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Contents
October Monthly Updates Video
https://youtu.be/nRRfHoUr0IA
Increased Clarity and Contextual Awareness
To help you initially build more valuable reports, Copilot can now engage with users to gather more details before creating a page. This ensures that Copilot has a comprehensive understanding of your needs right from the start to create a more relevant page for you. Copilot can also offer recommendations on fields and measures to use in a report.
Page Outline and Increasing Transparency
After creating a page with Copilot, you’ll now see an outline in the Copilot chat pane. This allows you to review the content and ensure that the page meets your requirements. The outline also helps add transparency so users can see what data fields copilot is using to build out the report.
Please visit our bigger blog post and documentation to learn more about creating reports in the Power BI service with Copilot.
To continue to use natural language to write DAX formulas for measures, Microsoft Fabric Copilot in DAX query view can help you write DAX queries, which can include query-scoped measures that can be added to your model.
Quick measures will continue to let you choose a calculation from a list and create a measure using a drag-and-drop template, generating the DAX formula upon clicking Add. You can see and modify these measures in the DAX formula bar. Quick measure suggestions public preview introduced quick queries as a pane, allowing you to drag-and-drop from the Data pane instead of within a dialog. The quick measures will continue to be in the Quick measures pane, and the dialog experience will no longer be available.
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Starting in October 2024, the tenant setting for this feature will also no longer be available and users who have older versions of Power BI Desktop and the public preview switch enabled will see the feature as disabled.
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Learn more with these resources:
You can now use visual calculations in combo charts, such as the line and clustered column chart, just like you could in the other chart types. Here’s an example of a visual calculation returning the moving average over three quarters:
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The visual calculation used here on the Line y-axis is:
ThreeQuarterMovingAverage = MOVINGAVERAGE([Sales Amount], 3)
This month we have enabled the use of visual calculations with field parameters, you can add a visual calculation to a visual that contains a field parameter and vice versa.
Field parameters can be used to quickly switch around what’s shown in a visual. For example, you can create a field parameter to enable your users to decide which attributes of a dimension to show. In this example a field parameter called Product Attribute can be used to determine what the Percent of grand total visual calculation returns:
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The Percent of grand total visual calculation is defined using the template as:
Percent of grand total = DIVIDE([Sales Amount], COLLAPSEALL([Sales Amount], ROWS))
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Please try out combining field parameters and visual calculations and let us know what would make the combined experience better for you by commenting below or at feedback.
Faster way to add a templated visual calculation
You can now add a templated visual calculation with fewer clicks by clicking on the bottom part of the New visual calculation ribbon button to see a menu that includes the templates. Clicking on a template will open the visual calculation mode where you can fill in the template and add your visual calculation.
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If you want to create a new visual calculation without using a template, either select the top part of the New visual calculation button or choose Custom from the visual calculation template menu shown above.
Learn more about visual calculations in our documentation.
In previous releases, the Azure Maps reference layer was limited to static shapes without the ability to conditionally format or bind geometries to customers’ business data. Additionally, the static nature of the reference layers limited user interaction, preventing actions such as selecting, filtering, clicking, or accessing tooltips for polygons and points, unlike other visual components.
With the data bound reference layer, this limitation is addressed by allowing seamless integration between the reference layers and customer business data. Reference layers can now be dynamically bound with the spatial fields used, empowering customers to visualize their business data in context with geographic or spatial elements. Users can now update their visuals in real time, interact with their data through Power BI's standard features such as filtering, cross-highlighting, and tooltips—greatly enhancing the flexibility and interactivity of the Azure Map visual.
Making your reference layers data bound is easy to do. We’ll automatically map the shapes in your reference layer to values of the field in the Location bucket in the Build pane based on the name property you provide in your reference layer file.
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This update also allows you to customize the colors of your shapes as well, using features like conditional formatting or through tying their color to a legend color.
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Shapes that aren’t tied to a value in your model are considered unmapped. You can format them to use custom colors or hide them completely from your map. As cross-highlighting is a temporary filter on the map, the treatment you apply here is also what will happen to unselected shapes when cross-highlighting from another visual.
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In the October 2024 update, markers for line charts, scatter charts, and anomalies are improved with this revamp. This update introduces new options that offer greater customization and flexibility, explore these new options and maximize their potential.
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Markers for line and scatter charts can be customized in two ways:
You can hide or show markers for a specific data point category by toggling the ‘Show for this category’ option. Please note that the 'Markers' toggle has been moved under ‘Show for all series.’
New format settings have been added to markers for line charts, scatter charts, and anomalies, including:
Please note, this new visual is in its early development stage, we don’t recommend using it in production currently. However, this is an excellent opportunity to experience the capabilities of this new slicer and provide us with feedback for future improvements.
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The new List Slicer can become hierarchical when more than one field is dragged into the field data well. This action will activate additional format settings specific to hierarchical data.
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Another advantage of the new slicer is the level of customization it offers, including:
We will be retiring this feature starting from December 31, 2024. Starting January 1st, 2025, users will not be able to create that report, and reports that were already created will not be updated.
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Why are we retiring the 'Teams activity analysis' report?
Teams provide native analytics view for teams and channels, which gives users insight into usage patterns and activity on their teams. Users can see data such as the number of active users, posts, replies, and more.
This is part of a more complete set of reporting available in Teams which provides a wider view of Teams usage. For example, you can see how many users communicate through channel and chat messages and the kinds of devices they use to connect to Teams. For more information, please refer to this documentation: View analytics for your teams in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support
How this will affect you
If you already created your 'Teams activity analytics' report, the data in this report will no longer be updated.
The option to create a new 'Teams activity analytics' report will be removed from the Create section in Power BI app inside Teams/Outlook. Therefore, you will no longer be able to create this report.
What you need to do to prepare
For users who need to understand how Teams is being used in their organization we advise you to use Teams 'Teams Analytics' instead.
For more information, refer to our documentation: View analytics for your teams in Microsoft Teams - Microsoft Support
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If you haven’t already, check out the Guy in a Cube video, the deep dive blog, and feature documentation to learn more and get ready-to-use examples of how to apply them today. If you know of a community post or video about these, please share it in the comments!
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Adding them as calculated tables ensures your model self-documents and stays current with all your latest changes automatically. Not only can these be used in calculated tables, but they will show the name or value of a column previously only displaying an ID.
INFO.VIEW.TABLES() shows information about the tables in your model, including what storage mode each table is in. You can also quickly identify tables marked as a date table by the Data Category of Time.
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INFO.VIEW.RELATIONSHIPS() shows information about all the relationships in your model, including a relationship column giving a quick summary of the to and from columns with direction and cardinality.
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INFO.VIEW.MEASURES() shows information about the model measures, including if it’s in a valid or error state.
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INFO.VIEW.COLUMNS() shows information about the columns, including data category and data type.
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Understanding current value filter behavior
When you are filtering multiple columns on the same table, the current default value filter behavior takes these filters and combines them into one, considering only the combinations that exist. Consider the following two columns on the same table:
Let’s look at an example, where we have a catalog showing availability of colors for products by year. The manufacturer of these products has experimented with making products in various colors throughout the years:
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We have three products that have been available in various colors over the years. Notice how there are no red products offered in 2024. That is going to be important a little later.
Now, let’s count the number of products by adding the following measure:
Number of Products = COUNTROWS( 'Catalog' )
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Now, let’s add another measure to calculate the total number of products for all years:
Number of Products All Years = CALCULATE ( [Number of Products], ALL ( 'Catalog'[Year] ) )
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If we switch the Year to 2024, we expect the ‘Number of Products’ measure to return 2, as there are just two products that are blue in 2024 and there are no red products in that year.
On top of that, we would expect that the number of products for all years will not change, because, after all, it is supposed to be calculated across all years. However, the ‘Number of Products for All Years’ changes from 6 to 5:
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The number of products across all years should still be 6, not 5. What we are seeing here is the value filter behavior in action: it is combining filters on the same table, removing combinations that did not exist. The filters are Year = 2024 and Color = Blue or Red. Since these two filters are on the same table, these filters are combined into one filter that only filters for the combinations that exist. Since there are no red products in 2024, the applied filter is Year = 2024 and Color = Blue.
Therefore, the number of products for all years now counts just the number of blue products, not the blue or red products. This returns 5, as you can confirm in the table.
Influencing the value filter behavior
This month we are giving you control over whether you want this behavior in your semantic model, by using the ‘Value filter behavior’ setting on your semantic model in the properties pane in the model view:
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Three options are available:
| Value filter behavior setting | Filters applied in the example | Result of example measure |
| Automatic | Year = 2024, Color = Blue |
5 |
| Independent | Year = 2024, Color = Blue or Red |
6 |
| Coalesced | Year = 2024, Color = Blue |
5 |
If you set the ‘Value filter behavior’ to Independent, the number of products for all returns 6, as expected, since the filters are Year = 2024 and Color = Blue or Red and are no longer combined:
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Learn more
Refer to our documentation to read more about visual filter behavior.
Today, the Power BI Mobile apps use two authentication libraries: MSAL when connecting to Power BI service and non-AD FS based Report Server scenarios. And ADAL when connecting to AD FS using OAuth protocol.
Since ADAL library reaches end-of-life, it is time for us to migrate all authentication scenarios to use MSAL. Given that MSAL requires AD FS 2019 or newer, the Power BI Mobile apps will no longer be able to connect to AD FS 2016 once this migration is completed.
If your organization is using AD FS 2016 with their Report Server, you will have to upgrade to Windows Server 2019 or later, or use Microsoft Entra application proxy, to be able to connect from Power BI mobile apps to their Report Server, by March 1st, 2025.
The "All language support" and “Highlight Invalid dates using DAX” options were added in the recent version update.
The Date Picker visual offers a modern calendar view, Presets, Pop-up mode, Default Selection, Themes, and more, making it a must-have date slicer for Power BI reports. Its rich formatting options help with brand consistency and a seamless UI experience.
Key Features:
🔗 Try Date Picker for FREE from AppSource
📊 Check out all features of the visual: Demo file
📃 Step-by-step instructions: Documentation
💡 YouTube Video: Video Link
📍 Learn more about visuals: https://powerviz.ai/
✅ Follow Powerviz: https://lnkd.in/gN_9Sa6U
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This method highlights within-cycle variations and trends across cycles. For example, a cycle plot of monthly sales over several years would display each month’s trend over time, making it easier to identify whether certain months consistently perform better or worse. It also reveals how overall trends (like yearly growth) affect individual periods.
Cycle plots are particularly useful for businesses and analysts who need to identify seasonality in sales, website traffic, or other metrics. By visualizing data this way, decision-makers can better plan for seasonal peaks and troughs, optimize inventory, and tailor marketing efforts.
In summary, cycle plots offer a clearer and more detailed perspective on time series data, making them an essential tool for uncovering and leveraging seasonal patterns.
Try the Cycle Plot for FREE now on your own data by downloading it from the AppSource.
Questions or remarks? Visit us at: https://visuals.novasilva.com/.
Network PRO excels at visualizing hierarchies, making it easier to understand relationships and faster to find answers. Whereas the Pin version of Network PRO is designed for dashboards, the Filter version will seamlessly integrate in your reports to make them more interactive and insightful. With cross-chart filtering enabled, selecting one or multiple nodes will dynamically filter data in other visuals and vice versa.
Main Features:
Product Page | Documentation | LinkedIn | Report Examples
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The following features make it unique compared to native decomposition tree visual.
1.It allows users to expand all nodes simultaneously.
Power_BI_October_2024_Feature_Summary2. Users can add a target measure as well.
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3. It allows 2 color patterns. The first pattern allows separate colors for each level. The second pattern allows a node and its descendants to have different colors from other nodes. This is depicted in the image below.
Power_BI_October_2024_Feature_Summary4. It allows users to select whether to display children only or all descendants on node click.
5. It allows users to adjust tree height, tree width, bar height.
6. It allows different label positioning such as under the bar, start and end.
Watch a demo of these features in a short video.
Download this visual from APPSOURCE
Download demo file from APPSOURCE
For more information visit excelnaccess DecompositionTree or contact zubair@excelnaccess.com
It complements your Master Data Management (MDM) solution and offers a lightweight alternative for business users that supports both reference data (such as Customer Region and Product master) and flat tables (such as Price List, Contracts, Projects, and Discounts).
HIGHLIGHTS
Master Data, Reference Data, Meta Data, Flat table editor
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Additional information
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This brand new visual brings to you these features:
See more info (including ChangeLog) on our website: ADWISE Advanced Column
This visual offer in-app purchases and comes with a 30-day free trial version. We want you to have full experience of our visual during the trial period, so all features are accessible in the trial.
You can use basic functionality without watermark. Licensing and pricing plans can be found in our FAQs: ADWISE Advanced Column FAQs
Don’t forget to try our other successful visual ADWISE RoadMap / Gantt.
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During the PBIR launch a few months ago, we acknowledged important service limitations and commitment to addressing them in the upcoming months.
The following features are now available for reports using PBIR format:
For further information regarding PBIR format, please refer to the documentation.
That’s all for this month!
We hope that you enjoy the update! If you installed Power BI Desktop from the Microsoft Store, please leave us a review.
As always, keep voting on Ideas to help us determine what to build next. We are looking forward to hearing from you!
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