Microsoft is giving away 50,000 FREE Microsoft Certification exam vouchers!
Enter the sweepstakes now!Preparing for a certification exam? Ask exam experts all your questions on May 15th. Register now.
Hi all,
Using Sage to create an ODBC connection with Power Query, however I want line one to show DATEFROM (XX/XX/XX) and then DATETO (XX/XX/XX), then my data in line three to be updated using these dates.
I've tried to add WHERE clause and GETDATE but nothing seems to work! The data is linked to a nominal table in Sage, like below:-
let
Source = Odbc.DataSource("dsn=SageLine50v28", [HierarchicalNavigation=true]),
AUDIT_JOURNAL_Table = Source{[Name="AUDIT_JOURNAL",Kind="Table"]}[Data],
#"Removed Columns" = Table.RemoveColumns(AUDIT_JOURNAL_Table,{"BANK_CODE", "BANK_FLAG", "DATE_ENTERED", "DATE_FLAG", "DELETED_FLAG", "DEPT_NAME", "DEPT_NUMBER", "DISPUTED", "DISPUTE_CODE", "EXTRA_REF", "FOREIGN_AMOUNT", "FUND_ID", "HEADER_NUMBER", "INV_REF", "OSS_COUNTRY_OF_VAT", "OSS_REPORTING_TYPE", "OSS_REPORTING_TYPE_NAME", "PAID_FLAG", "PAID_STATUS", "RECORD_CREATE_DATE", "RECORD_DELETED", "RECORD_MODIFY_DATE", "RTD_FLAG", "SPLIT_NUMBER", "STMT_TEXT", "VAT_FLAG", "VAT_FLAG_CODE", "VAT_LEDGER_RETURN_ID", "VAT_RECONCILED_DATE", "NOMINAL_CODE"})
in
#"Removed Columns"
Hi @Sage_user
You can consider to filter the data.e g
Table.SelectRows(#"Changed Type", each [Column1] >= #date(2021, 5, 1) and [Column2] <= #date(2023, 9, 1))
If the following above cannot meet your requirement, can you provide some sample picture or output you want?
Best Regards!
Yolo Zhu
If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution to help the other members find it more quickly.
Hi Yolo Zhu and thanks for helping, I really appreciate it!
Do I enter this in advanced editor under 'let'? Thus it being the below (gives an error). Sample picture of what i want is below also..
let
Source = Odbc.DataSource("dsn=SageLine50v28", [HierarchicalNavigation=true]),
AUDIT_JOURNAL_Table = Source{[Name="AUDIT_JOURNAL",Kind="Table"]}[Data],
#"Removed Columns" = Table.RemoveColumns(AUDIT_JOURNAL_Table,{"DATE_ENTERED", "DATE_FLAG", "DELETED_FLAG", "DEPT_NAME", "DEPT_NUMBER", "DISPUTED", "DISPUTE_CODE", "FUND_ID", "OSS_COUNTRY_OF_VAT", "OSS_REPORTING_TYPE", "OSS_REPORTING_TYPE_NAME", "PAID_FLAG", "PAID_STATUS", "RECORD_CREATE_DATE", "RECORD_DELETED", "RTD_FLAG", "SPLIT_NUMBER", "STMT_TEXT", "VAT_FLAG", "VAT_FLAG_CODE", "VAT_LEDGER_RETURN_ID", "VAT_RECONCILED_DATE"}),
#"Reordered Columns" = Table.ReorderColumns(#"Removed Columns",{"ACCOUNT_REF", "DETAILS", "AMOUNT", "FOREIGN_AMOUNT", "EXTRA_REF", "BANK_CODE", "BANK_FLAG", "DATE", "HEADER_NUMBER", "INV_REF", "NOMINAL_CODE", "RECORD_MODIFY_DATE", "TAX_CODE", "TRAN_NUMBER", "TYPE", "USER_NAME"}),
#"Removed Columns1" = Table.RemoveColumns(#"Reordered Columns",{"BANK_CODE", "BANK_FLAG", "HEADER_NUMBER"}),
#"Reordered Columns1" = Table.ReorderColumns(#"Removed Columns1",{"ACCOUNT_REF", "NOMINAL_CODE", "DETAILS", "TYPE", "AMOUNT", "FOREIGN_AMOUNT", "EXTRA_REF", "DATE", "INV_REF", "RECORD_MODIFY_DATE", "TAX_CODE", "TRAN_NUMBER", "USER_NAME"}),
#"Changed Type" = Table.TransformColumnTypes(#"Reordered Columns1",{{"DATE", type date}})
Table.SelectRows(#"Changed Type", each [Column1] >= #date(2021, 5, 1) and [Column2] <= #date(2023, 9, 1))
in
#"Changed Type"
Check out the April 2025 Power BI update to learn about new features.
Explore and share Fabric Notebooks to boost Power BI insights in the new community notebooks gallery.