Learn from the best! Meet the four finalists headed to the FINALS of the Power BI Dataviz World Championships! Register now
I have used a Table.DuplicateColumn command to create a copy of a datetime column (Start DateTime), including specifying the type as date:
#"Duplicated Start DateTime" = Table.DuplicateColumn(#"Previous Step", "Start DateTime", "Start Date", type date)
My question / issue is that the ColumnType option seems to be ignored and the new column appears as datetime (although the 'icon' is date), which I then have to change in another step.
Original columns:
New Column:
Solved! Go to Solution.
Might be just a cosmetic issue, similar to what we had for the longest time with Table.AddColumn *
Note: Specifying a Date column type is futile as Power BI doesn't actually have such a data type. In Power BI everything is datetime behind the scenes.
* on second thought you can replace Table.DuplicateColumn with Table.AddColumn.
Might be just a cosmetic issue, similar to what we had for the longest time with Table.AddColumn *
Note: Specifying a Date column type is futile as Power BI doesn't actually have such a data type. In Power BI everything is datetime behind the scenes.
* on second thought you can replace Table.DuplicateColumn with Table.AddColumn.
Table.AddColumn(#"Previous Step", "Start Date", each Date.From([Start DateTime]), type date)
It's what we call "syntax sugar" - a convenience function that is equivalent (or should be) to a more atomic function.
A new Power BI DataViz World Championship is coming this June! Don't miss out on submitting your entry.
Share feedback directly with Fabric product managers, participate in targeted research studies and influence the Fabric roadmap.