Don't miss your chance to take exam DP-600 or DP-700 on us!
Request nowLearn from the best! Meet the four finalists headed to the FINALS of the Power BI Dataviz World Championships! Register now
Hello Team,
This might be a simple for you experts, but I am stuck.
I have created a power query filter on a date column.
=Table.SelectRows(#"PrevStep", each [Clearing Date] >= #date(2020, 2, 1) and [Clearing Date] <= #date(2020, 12, 31))
My requirement is not to keep these rows. Can anyone help me with this ?
Thank You in advance.
Solved! Go to Solution.
One step away,
= Table.SelectRows(#"PrevStep", each not ( [Clearing Date] >= #date(2020, 2, 1) and [Clearing Date] <= #date(2020, 12, 31)))
or
=Table.SelectRows(#"PrevStep", each [Clearing Date] < #date(2020, 2, 1) or [Clearing Date] > #date(2020, 12, 31))
| Thanks to the great efforts by MS engineers to simplify syntax of DAX! Most beginners are SUCCESSFULLY MISLED to think that they could easily master DAX; but it turns out that the intricacy of the most frequently used RANKX() is still way beyond their comprehension! |
DAX is simple, but NOT EASY! |
One step away,
= Table.SelectRows(#"PrevStep", each not ( [Clearing Date] >= #date(2020, 2, 1) and [Clearing Date] <= #date(2020, 12, 31)))
or
=Table.SelectRows(#"PrevStep", each [Clearing Date] < #date(2020, 2, 1) or [Clearing Date] > #date(2020, 12, 31))
| Thanks to the great efforts by MS engineers to simplify syntax of DAX! Most beginners are SUCCESSFULLY MISLED to think that they could easily master DAX; but it turns out that the intricacy of the most frequently used RANKX() is still way beyond their comprehension! |
DAX is simple, but NOT EASY! |
Share feedback directly with Fabric product managers, participate in targeted research studies and influence the Fabric roadmap.
Check out the February 2026 Power BI update to learn about new features.