cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Fabric is Generally Available. Browse Fabric Presentations. Work towards your Fabric certification with the Cloud Skills Challenge.

Reply
richard-powerbi
Post Patron
Post Patron

How to remove and add keys? Table.ReplaceKeys how does it work?

I have a SQL table loaded in PBI. I want to create my own primary keys and qualify them as keys in PBI.

The documentation on Table.ReplaceKeys is really bad. Can anyone explain how it works? Or is there another way of doing this?

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
dax
Community Support
Community Support

Hi @richard-powerbi , 

It seems to change key, you could try below M code and refer to power-query-m-primer-part13-tables-table-think-ii  and this post  for details.

let

   
  
  Source = #table(
    {"CompanyID", "Name", "Location"}, 
      {
        {1, "ABC Company", "Chicago"}, 
        {2, "ABC Company", "Charlotte"}, 
        {3, "Some Other Company", "Cincinnati"}
      }
    ),
  KeysTagged = Table.AddKey(Source, {"CompanyID"}, true),
  aa=Table.ReplaceKeys(
        KeysTagged,
        {
            [Columns = {"Location"},
            Primary = true]
        }
    )
in
 Table.Keys(aa)

Best Regards,
Zoe Zhi

If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.

View solution in original post

4 REPLIES 4
dax
Community Support
Community Support

Hi @richard-powerbi , 

It seems to change key, you could try below M code and refer to power-query-m-primer-part13-tables-table-think-ii  and this post  for details.

let

   
  
  Source = #table(
    {"CompanyID", "Name", "Location"}, 
      {
        {1, "ABC Company", "Chicago"}, 
        {2, "ABC Company", "Charlotte"}, 
        {3, "Some Other Company", "Cincinnati"}
      }
    ),
  KeysTagged = Table.AddKey(Source, {"CompanyID"}, true),
  aa=Table.ReplaceKeys(
        KeysTagged,
        {
            [Columns = {"Location"},
            Primary = true]
        }
    )
in
 Table.Keys(aa)

Best Regards,
Zoe Zhi

If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.

Another question, is below code correct if I want two columns to act as one composite key? Both columns do not have unique values, only the combination of them is unique.

 

= Table.ReplaceKeys(Source, {[Columns = List.Combine({{"Column1"}, {"Column2"}), Primary = true]})

 

Later on I will merge on these two columns and I would like this utilize this for performance. Does above code work for this?

@dax

Anyone knows?

Hi @richard-powerbi,

You could simplify it as

... {[Columns = {"Column1", "Column2"}, Primary = true]})

and as long as it's unique you should see some performance improvements.



Feel free to connect with me:
LinkedIn

Helpful resources

Announcements
PBI November 2023 Update Carousel

Power BI Monthly Update - November 2023

Check out the November 2023 Power BI update to learn about new features.

Community News

Fabric Community News unified experience

Read the latest Fabric Community announcements, including updates on Power BI, Synapse, Data Factory and Data Activator.

Power BI Fabric Summit Carousel

The largest Power BI and Fabric virtual conference

130+ sessions, 130+ speakers, Product managers, MVPs, and experts. All about Power BI and Fabric. Attend online or watch the recordings.

Top Solution Authors
Top Kudoed Authors