Get certified for free when you join Fabric Data Days 2026 and dive into Fabric, Power BI, SQL, AI, and other essential data skills.
Join nowData Days is here! Join us now for 60+ days of learning, challenges, and connection. Learn more
This is my first topic as I am new in PowerQuery. My problem seems very simple, but I didn't found the solution in examples.
I have different products and each product has different sizes and sometimes stock.
My table has three columns: The type of the product, the size and the stock.
I would like to have an extra fourth column with all the available sizes of one product.
let
Bron = Excel.CurrentWorkbook(){[Name="tblAvailableSizes"]}[Content],
TypeGewijzigd = Table.TransformColumnTypes(Bron,{{"product", type text}, {"size", type text}, {"stock", Int64.Type}}),
RijenGesorteerd = Table.Sort(TypeGewijzigd,{{"product", Order.Ascending}, {"size", Order.Ascending}})
in
RijenGesorteerd
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi,
let
Bron = Excel.CurrentWorkbook(){[Name="tblAvailableSizes"]}[Content],
TypeGewijzigd = Table.TransformColumnTypes(Bron,{{"product", type text}, {"size", type text}, {"stock", Int64.Type}}),
RijenGesorteerd = Table.Sort(TypeGewijzigd,{{"product", Order.Ascending}, {"size", Order.Ascending}}),
Group = Table.Group(RijenGesorteerd, {"product"},
{{"Data", each _, type table [product=text, size=number, stock=nullable number]},
{"available", each Text.Combine(Table.SelectRows(_, each [stock]<>0 and [stock]<>null)[size], ", "), type text}}),
Expand = Table.ExpandTableColumn(Group, "Data", {"size", "stock"}, {"size", "stock"})
in
Expand
Stéphane
Hi,
A few seconds to find the solution, a few minutes to write the answer
but several years to master Power Query (and not all of them !)
Stéphane
Hi,
let
Bron = Excel.CurrentWorkbook(){[Name="tblAvailableSizes"]}[Content],
TypeGewijzigd = Table.TransformColumnTypes(Bron,{{"product", type text}, {"size", type text}, {"stock", Int64.Type}}),
RijenGesorteerd = Table.Sort(TypeGewijzigd,{{"product", Order.Ascending}, {"size", Order.Ascending}}),
Group = Table.Group(RijenGesorteerd, {"product"},
{{"Data", each _, type table [product=text, size=number, stock=nullable number]},
{"available", each Text.Combine(Table.SelectRows(_, each [stock]<>0 and [stock]<>null)[size], ", "), type text}}),
Expand = Table.ExpandTableColumn(Group, "Data", {"size", "stock"}, {"size", "stock"})
in
Expand
Stéphane
Hi Stéphane,
This is my first post. I am very happy and totally buffled that you solved it by grouping and expanding. I didn't know that you could expand things.
Can you tell me how much time it costs you to solve the problem?
If have a another problem, and I have, I would like to post it as well.
Many thanks.
Don't miss out on Data Days, June 15 through August 7. Learn Fabric, Power BI, SQL, AI and more.
Check out the May 2026 Power BI update to learn about new features.
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 4 | |
| 4 | |
| 3 | |
| 2 | |
| 1 |
| User | Count |
|---|---|
| 11 | |
| 11 | |
| 4 | |
| 4 | |
| 4 |