Don't miss your chance to take the Fabric Data Engineer (DP-600) exam for FREE! Find out how by attending the DP-600 session on April 23rd (pacific time), live or on-demand.
Learn moreNext up in the FabCon + SQLCon recap series: The roadmap for Microsoft SQL and Maximizing Developer experiences in Fabric. All sessions are available on-demand after the live show. Register now
I've got some trouble with type conversion. CSV flat contains column named rocket cost and it is written in format 50.0 or 75.0 or 1,130.0 etc. So it is clearly english format, where , is thousand sepeartor and . is decimal separator. When I try to load it into Power BI I get text file (beacuse I'm working on polish local settings where there is no . in numbers). So I want change regional settings for this column as USA. But unfortunatly I get strange thing, acutally I see numbers but from 50.0 it changes to 50,0. That's ridiciolous and not understandable for me. Can any1 help? Maybe if I stream my screen for you, you will see what's going on more clearly. I need perhaps 3 minutes of your time so if any1 can help I would be very very thankful
Solved! Go to Solution.
@Gjakovasc
There's culture applied
1. on import, in power query. If not specified it defaults to the current system
2. after importing the value there's a display culture that doesn't have to mutate the underlying data type. Like date-times are integers/floats under the hood, but you can set them to display in any text format.
You can use the optional culture parameter set to en-US Which tells it use that locale/culture's rules for converting text to numbers.
#"Numbers from en-US" = Table.TransformColumns(
Source,
{
{"Number", each Number.FromText(_, "en-US"), type number}
}
),
hopefully this solve the problem.
@Gjakovasc
There's culture applied
1. on import, in power query. If not specified it defaults to the current system
2. after importing the value there's a display culture that doesn't have to mutate the underlying data type. Like date-times are integers/floats under the hood, but you can set them to display in any text format.
You can use the optional culture parameter set to en-US Which tells it use that locale/culture's rules for converting text to numbers.
#"Numbers from en-US" = Table.TransformColumns(
Source,
{
{"Number", each Number.FromText(_, "en-US"), type number}
}
),
hopefully this solve the problem.
If you have recently started exploring Fabric, we'd love to hear how it's going. Your feedback can help with product improvements.
A new Power BI DataViz World Championship is coming this June! Don't miss out on submitting your entry.
Share feedback directly with Fabric product managers, participate in targeted research studies and influence the Fabric roadmap.
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 6 | |
| 3 | |
| 3 | |
| 3 | |
| 2 |