Supplies are limited. Contact info@espc.tech right away to save your spot before the conference sells out.
Get your discountScore big with last-minute savings on the final tickets to FabCon Vienna. Secure your discount
Hello,
I have a table that includes a column containing previous_ids. I want to use this column to find each record's root id. Some records don't have a previous_id and some previous_id's lead to a record that has a previous_id of its own. The longest chain is 5.
This is the desired outcome is this:
id | previous_id | root_id |
1 | null | 1 |
2 | null | 2 |
3 | 1 | 1 |
4 | 3 | 1 |
5 | 2 | 2 |
6 | 4 | 1 |
I have solved this using a sequence of nested joins. Bascially:
= Table.NestedJoin(#"previous_step", {"previous_id_number_1"}, #"foo_step", {"id"}, "previous_id_number_2", JoinKind.LeftOuter)
= Table.NestedJoin(#"previous_step", {"previous_id_number_2"}, #"foo_step", {"id"}, "previous_id_number_3", JoinKind.LeftOuter)
...
This method works, but seems slow and fragile.
Is there a better way to do this in Power Query?
Thanks,
Herbie
Solved! Go to Solution.
the category of PATH function in DAX can resolve this kind of problems efficiently.
in M language, it may take more resources and time.
the category of PATH function in DAX can resolve this kind of problems efficiently.
in M language, it may take more resources and time.