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Forgive me - I'm quite new to this!
Example:
Jane Doe John Smith | Jane Doe | John Smith |
Jada Holmes Mo Higgins | Jada Holmes | Mo Higgins |
Both names are in the same column (Column 1); however, I'd like to extract the names and break them into two new columns.
I can't exactly use a character count because the name characters vary. Is there a way to assess by second line?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @avo_om2134
When you use the Split Column function, you can specify a custom character to identify Line Breaks. The notation in Power Query is #(lf) [or #(cr) if it does work]. But you might need to be careful as the Power Query wizard might think you are trying to adding this text string "#(#)(lf)" instead of "#(lf)"
let
Source = Table.FromRows(Json.Document(Binary.Decompress(Binary.FromText("i45W8krMS1VwyU+NyfPKz8hTCM7NLMlQitUBSaQkKnjk5+SmFsfk+eYreGSmp2fmFSvFxgIA", BinaryEncoding.Base64), Compression.Deflate)), let _t = ((type nullable text) meta [Serialized.Text = true]) in type table [#"Original Column" = _t]),
#"Split Column by Delimiter" = Table.SplitColumn(Source, "Original Column", Splitter.SplitTextByDelimiter("#(lf)", QuoteStyle.Csv), {"Original Column.1", "Original Column.2"})
in
#"Split Column by Delimiter"
I would try splitting to rows, and then removing the empty rows. You can then unpivot the column if you need two columns.
Hi @avo_om2134
When you use the Split Column function, you can specify a custom character to identify Line Breaks. The notation in Power Query is #(lf) [or #(cr) if it does work]. But you might need to be careful as the Power Query wizard might think you are trying to adding this text string "#(#)(lf)" instead of "#(lf)"
let
Source = Table.FromRows(Json.Document(Binary.Decompress(Binary.FromText("i45W8krMS1VwyU+NyfPKz8hTCM7NLMlQitUBSaQkKnjk5+SmFsfk+eYreGSmp2fmFSvFxgIA", BinaryEncoding.Base64), Compression.Deflate)), let _t = ((type nullable text) meta [Serialized.Text = true]) in type table [#"Original Column" = _t]),
#"Split Column by Delimiter" = Table.SplitColumn(Source, "Original Column", Splitter.SplitTextByDelimiter("#(lf)", QuoteStyle.Csv), {"Original Column.1", "Original Column.2"})
in
#"Split Column by Delimiter"
Thank you so much - I appreciate it. That worked. Good call out on the "#(#)(lf)" - that absolutely happened.
One more question - do you know how to remove additional line breaks in the column?
It is currently structured as:
Name
#(lf)
#(lf)
Name
When I try the above, a blank pulls over as that is what's next. I discovered when it's just the name beneath the other name it works correctly as you instructed above.
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