Share feedback directly with Fabric product managers, participate in targeted research studies and influence the Fabric roadmap.
Sign up nowGet Fabric certified for FREE! Don't miss your chance! Learn more
Can someone clarify if there is any dfference between these to for examaple
= let alist = {"a","b","b","c","d","e"} , rlist = {"b","d","c"}
in
List.RemoveMatchingItems( alist , rlist )
= let alist = {"a","b","b","c","d","e"} , rlist = {"b","d","c"}
in
List.RemoveItems( alist , rlist )so looking at docs, it seems to suggest that with Matching only 1 "b" would be removed, but this does not seem to be the case,
can anyone help with how these to differ , if they do?
Solved! Go to Solution.
The difference is that List.RemoveMatchingItems supports an optional equationCriteria function where you can define what "matching" means.
Hey!
Like @lbendlin says with List.RemoveMatchingItems you have a little more control on how he sees matches. For example, if you have a list that randomly has some Uppercase and lowercase words, you can use a comparison criteria to make power query ignore Uppercases. See the code below:
let
// our list of names
Source = {
"Luke", "Leia",
"C3PO", "R2D2",
"Darth Vader", "Anakin Skywalker",
"Leia", "Chewbacca"
},
// the list with characters we want to remove
RemoveList = {
"r2d2",
"LEia"
},
// with Comparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase we can ignore all the uppercase letters so he matches correctly
Result = List.RemoveMatchingItems(
Source,
RemoveList,
Comparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase
)
in
Result
Hopefully this explains it!
Hey!
Like @lbendlin says with List.RemoveMatchingItems you have a little more control on how he sees matches. For example, if you have a list that randomly has some Uppercase and lowercase words, you can use a comparison criteria to make power query ignore Uppercases. See the code below:
let
// our list of names
Source = {
"Luke", "Leia",
"C3PO", "R2D2",
"Darth Vader", "Anakin Skywalker",
"Leia", "Chewbacca"
},
// the list with characters we want to remove
RemoveList = {
"r2d2",
"LEia"
},
// with Comparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase we can ignore all the uppercase letters so he matches correctly
Result = List.RemoveMatchingItems(
Source,
RemoveList,
Comparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase
)
in
Result
Hopefully this explains it!
The difference is that List.RemoveMatchingItems supports an optional equationCriteria function where you can define what "matching" means.
Thank you both ,
Richard.
If you love stickers, then you will definitely want to check out our Community Sticker Challenge!
Check out the January 2026 Power BI update to learn about new features.
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 7 | |
| 5 | |
| 4 | |
| 3 | |
| 3 |
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 13 | |
| 11 | |
| 11 | |
| 8 | |
| 6 |