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Anonymous
Not applicable

The fastest way to create a join between two tables containing a UUID and dates

Hello!

 

I'm looking for the fastest way to to create a join (with M) between two tables containing a UUID and dates

 

I have a table A containing more than 1M rows

 

cher90_0-1665753387974.png

 

 

And a table B containing more than 1M rows

 

cher90_1-1665753405218.png

 

 

With "Table.NestedJoin" it takes a long time.

 

I  read about a technique with "Table.Join" instead of "Table.NestedJoin" but I can't get it to work.

 

= Table.NestedJoin(#"step1", {"sharing_flow_id"}, #"table B", {"sharing_flow_id"}, "table B", JoinKind.RightOuter),

 

Thanks!

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
ImkeF
Community Champion
Community Champion

Hello @Anonymous ,
the syntax for the Table.Join formula would be this:
Table.Join(#"step1", {"sharing_flow_id"}, #"table B", {"sharing_flow_id"}, JoinKind.RightOuter),

If one of the joining columns has unique values in it, you can speed up the process immensly by creating a KeyColumn like described here: 
Chris Webb's BI Blog: Improving The Performance Of Aggregation After A Merge In Power BI And Excel Power Query/Get&Transform Chris Webb's BI Blog (crossjoin.co.uk)


You can find more performance tips here, btw:
Speed/Performance aspects – The BIccountant

Imke Feldmann (The BIccountant)

If you liked my solution, please give it a thumbs up. And if I did answer your question, please mark this post as a solution. Thanks!

How to integrate M-code into your solution -- How to get your questions answered quickly -- How to provide sample data -- Check out more PBI- learning resources here -- Performance Tipps for M-queries

View solution in original post

2 REPLIES 2
ImkeF
Community Champion
Community Champion

Hello @Anonymous ,
the syntax for the Table.Join formula would be this:
Table.Join(#"step1", {"sharing_flow_id"}, #"table B", {"sharing_flow_id"}, JoinKind.RightOuter),

If one of the joining columns has unique values in it, you can speed up the process immensly by creating a KeyColumn like described here: 
Chris Webb's BI Blog: Improving The Performance Of Aggregation After A Merge In Power BI And Excel Power Query/Get&Transform Chris Webb's BI Blog (crossjoin.co.uk)


You can find more performance tips here, btw:
Speed/Performance aspects – The BIccountant

Imke Feldmann (The BIccountant)

If you liked my solution, please give it a thumbs up. And if I did answer your question, please mark this post as a solution. Thanks!

How to integrate M-code into your solution -- How to get your questions answered quickly -- How to provide sample data -- Check out more PBI- learning resources here -- Performance Tipps for M-queries

Anonymous
Not applicable

Thanks a lot 

 

I also found this article very interesting!

 

https://exceleratorbi.com.au/replace-guids-with-a-surrogate-key-for-better-performance/

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