Register now to learn Fabric in free live sessions led by the best Microsoft experts. From Apr 16 to May 9, in English and Spanish.
We're looking to make a report that shows how a material (leftmost) flows into the supply chain similar to the image below:
The arrows are not necessary to replicate (I did this with a flowchart application) but it is necessary to show overlaps in the supply chain (eg: Factory B being a supplier for Clients A & B).
So far I have tried the Tree chart (https://ck-corp.github.io/TreePowerBIVisual/), the Sankey chart and xViz hierarchy charts but none of these seem to be able to visualize the data in the manner shown in the image. That said, does anyone know a supply chain visual that can (or closely) visualize our data in a similar manner?
Hi @olimilo
You can use Hierarchy Tree.
Here is the output:
Best Regards,
Link
Is that the answer you're looking for? If this post helps, then please consider Accept it as the solution. Really appreciate!
@olimilo did you looked at this one? Business Apps – Microsoft AppSource
Check my latest blog post Comparing Selected Client With Other Top N Clients | PeryTUS I would ❤ Kudos if my solution helped. 👉 If you can spend time posting the question, you can also make efforts to give Kudos to whoever helped to solve your problem. It is a token of appreciation!
⚡Visit us at https://perytus.com, your one-stop-shop for Power BI-related projects/training/consultancy.⚡
Subscribe to the @PowerBIHowTo YT channel for an upcoming video on List and Record functions in Power Query!!
Learn Power BI and Fabric - subscribe to our YT channel - Click here: @PowerBIHowTo
If my solution proved useful, I'd be delighted to receive Kudos. When you put effort into asking a question, it's equally thoughtful to acknowledge and give Kudos to the individual who helped you solve the problem. It's a small gesture that shows appreciation and encouragement! ❤
Did I answer your question? Mark my post as a solution. Proud to be a Super User! Appreciate your Kudos 🙂
Feel free to email me with any of your BI needs.
@olimilo did you looked into visio visual Add Visio Visuals to Power BI reports - Visio (microsoft.com)
Check my latest blog post Comparing Selected Client With Other Top N Clients | PeryTUS I would ❤ Kudos if my solution helped. 👉 If you can spend time posting the question, you can also make efforts to give Kudos to whoever helped to solve your problem. It is a token of appreciation!
⚡Visit us at https://perytus.com, your one-stop-shop for Power BI-related projects/training/consultancy.⚡
Subscribe to the @PowerBIHowTo YT channel for an upcoming video on List and Record functions in Power Query!!
Learn Power BI and Fabric - subscribe to our YT channel - Click here: @PowerBIHowTo
If my solution proved useful, I'd be delighted to receive Kudos. When you put effort into asking a question, it's equally thoughtful to acknowledge and give Kudos to the individual who helped you solve the problem. It's a small gesture that shows appreciation and encouragement! ❤
Did I answer your question? Mark my post as a solution. Proud to be a Super User! Appreciate your Kudos 🙂
Feel free to email me with any of your BI needs.
I did look into this but using the Visio visual would require us to create a flowchart for each set of data (or process flow) which looks more like it's coming from static data which is not how we want to do this. Over time, the process flow will change for each use case so we want to be able to feed the data to PBI and have PBI map it accordingly.
To clarify, we're not trying to make a flowchart but trying to visualize a process flow using data.
Covering the world! 9:00-10:30 AM Sydney, 4:00-5:30 PM CET (Paris/Berlin), 7:00-8:30 PM Mexico City
Check out the April 2024 Power BI update to learn about new features.
User | Count |
---|---|
109 | |
99 | |
77 | |
66 | |
54 |
User | Count |
---|---|
144 | |
104 | |
102 | |
87 | |
64 |