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mohassan99
Helper II
Helper II

Chart - Clustered Column and line

I have this clustered column & line chart.
 

I want two values on the horizontal axis, but there's one.I want two values on the horizontal axis, but there's one.

 

The issue with it is clearer, even to me, when I show it as a table.

 

If show as table there's only one row. I think there should be two..If show as table there's only one row. I think there should be two..

 

This is how it looks as a table:

 

Table view.Table view.

 

What I think I want/need is 2020 in one row and 2021 in another.

 

The bottom line is the question is how to I reorganize the data so that it is in two rows with 2020 in one row and 2021 in the other? 

 

The reason I want them in two rows is because I want 2020 and 2021 to be all I have on the x axis. I want "Earnings" and "Potential Earnings" on the one vertical axis as a columns and "Percent of Potential Earned" on the other vertical as a line.

 

Data Model:

 

Each of these is from a different table. There are three one-way relationships between the tables. That’s …because each table’s primary key is a cluster of these 3 (ProviderID, AddressID, and IncentiveProgram)

 

Data Model.Data Model.

 
2 ACCEPTED SOLUTIONS

@mohassan99 

Is this what you are trying to acheive?

jsaunders_zero9_0-1651529247442.png

Couple of things, Is there any reason that you can't append the you two tables together, they look identical.

Here is a link to a file that I put together to show you what I mean - mohassan99_sample.pbix.

I would also suggest you looking into some basic data modelling concepts in Power BI, I re read your first question about your data model and three relationships - relationships don't work how you think they do.

Thank you

View solution in original post

I think I may have to append the tables in a query. Apparently a data relationship is not a join so, yeah, I wasn't sure what they were. 

 

Thank you,

Mo

View solution in original post

5 REPLIES 5
jsaunders_zero9
Responsive Resident
Responsive Resident

Hi @mohassan99 

I would suggest introducing a calendar table and then summing your measures as totals, can you provide some dummy data and I can m show you how.
Thank you

 
 

Do you mean a date table? PowerBI says:

A date table is a table that meets the following requirements:

  • It must have a column of data type date (or date/time)—known as the date column.
  • The date column must contain unique values. (Not the case.)
  • The date column must not contain BLANKs.
  • The date column must not have any missing dates.
  • The date column must span full years. A year isn't necessarily a calendar year (January-December).
  • The date table must be marked as a date table.

The data looks like:

Query/Data Source 1

YearProviderValue1

2020

110
2020110
2020220
2020220

 

Query/Data Source 1

YearProviderValue1
2021130
2021130
2021240
2021240
 
 

@mohassan99 

Is this what you are trying to acheive?

jsaunders_zero9_0-1651529247442.png

Couple of things, Is there any reason that you can't append the you two tables together, they look identical.

Here is a link to a file that I put together to show you what I mean - mohassan99_sample.pbix.

I would also suggest you looking into some basic data modelling concepts in Power BI, I re read your first question about your data model and three relationships - relationships don't work how you think they do.

Thank you

I think I may have to append the tables in a query. Apparently a data relationship is not a join so, yeah, I wasn't sure what they were. 

 

Thank you,

Mo

Spot on mate, best to append those in PQ before bringing into PBI

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