Join us at FabCon Atlanta from March 16 - 20, 2026, for the ultimate Fabric, Power BI, AI and SQL community-led event. Save $200 with code FABCOMM.
Register now!To celebrate FabCon Vienna, we are offering 50% off select exams. Ends October 3rd. Request your discount now.
Hi
My Data is a table that has two column's, a user name and their type. I want to take this information and flip it so I have new columns based on the User Type values, in my case there are just two. The Pivot options works, I get the headings, but as i don't add any aggregation I get an error.
Start and Result table:
Start
Result
The smaller tabel is waht I am trying to aim for.
Chris
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi @Anonymous ,
I believe this is due to the fact that your data configuration provides no relationship between the names for PQ to be able to assign them together on a single row under the new headings.
This thread explains it pretty well, I think:
One user suggests to add an index before performing the pivot which is actually pretty smart as it visualises the problem quite nicely:
You can see where PQ is struggling: it can't correctly allocate two names to the same row as they have no relationsip to one another in the original table.
Pete
Proud to be a Datanaut!
Hi @ccarpent ,
I believe this is due to the fact that your data configuration provides no relationship between the names for PQ to be able to assign them together on a single row under the new headings.
This thread explains it pretty well, I think:
One user suggests to add an index before performing the pivot which is actually pretty smart as it visualises the problem quite nicely:
You can see where PQ is struggling: it can't correctly allocate two names to the same row as they have no relationsip to one another in the original table.
Pete
Hi @Anonymous ,
I believe this is due to the fact that your data configuration provides no relationship between the names for PQ to be able to assign them together on a single row under the new headings.
This thread explains it pretty well, I think:
One user suggests to add an index before performing the pivot which is actually pretty smart as it visualises the problem quite nicely:
You can see where PQ is struggling: it can't correctly allocate two names to the same row as they have no relationsip to one another in the original table.
Pete
Proud to be a Datanaut!
Hi
Your right, I need to rethink the problem, thanks for the quick response.