Get certified for free when you join Fabric Data Days 2026 and dive into Fabric, Power BI, SQL, AI, and other essential data skills.
Join nowData Days is here! Join us now for 60+ days of learning, challenges, and connection. Learn more
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! |
Don't miss out on Data Days, June 15 through August 7. Learn Fabric, Power BI, SQL, AI and more.
Check out the May 2026 Power BI update to learn about new features.
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 4 | |
| 4 | |
| 3 | |
| 2 | |
| 1 |
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 11 | |
| 11 | |
| 5 | |
| 4 | |
| 4 |