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Is there a way to link each shape in infographic designer to a measure?
I am able to drag in the measure I like into the measure bucket but unable to tie the shape to the measure directly.
The only way to link it is by fill percentage but I want to represent the sum that is defined in the measure within the shapes.
For example: I have two measures: Sales and Revenue (summed). I have two shapes: Circle and square. I want the circle to the be sum of the sales and square to be the sum of the revenue.
Any help would be appreciated 🙂
Team.
Did you have any update?
Hi @dj866 , I'm having the same problem, and try with your steps, but still cannot make it run correctly.
My case: I have 5 different measures, and want to plot them in one cumulated column (adding all them) seeing the different colours of each measure and with a specified shape (this is why I need the inforgraphic designer).
I have created the table with row numbers and measures name, but I don't know how to create the measure depending on the row number.
Could you help me with this issue?
Thanks in advance.
If you want the graph to shown a bar, line or other graphic for each measure you need to go to the standard visualization formatting pane -> Chart -> activate Legend by Measures.
Dealing with the same problem and really hoping someone from Microsoft can post a solution.
If you use the Legend by Measure option, this allows you to have multuple columns (or rows) with one measure per row, but they must all be the same icon. Kind of defeats the purpose of having an infographic tool in the first place.
My workaround was to create a summary table where, in one column, every row was the category name, and in another column, every row was the value that category should have. However, this solution is not dynamic, as the calculated table is preprocessed: https://community.powerbi.com/t5/Desktop/how-to-create-table-Summarizecolumns-keep-filter-context/m-...
Adding statements that would force the DAX expression to recalculate continuously (ex. 'NOW') doesn't solve the problem.
So after spending a day on this, I'm back to square one.
Don't know if @acbg , @khicks , or others are still looking for an answer, but after some experimentation, I found a solution.
If someone is having this problem, reply and I'll post something more detailed with examples, but the simple-ish summary is:
Did you ever identify a resolution for this?
-=KwH=-
Nope 😞
@acbg,
How do you create the visual? Does the data binding feature returns your expected result?
Regards,
Lydia
I did try that but its not really differentiating the size between the shapes. And it looks like it forces to be add the split point.
I am using the very basic bar graph, would expect the measures to be different but it comes across as the same bars.
Data is different between job size and count of effort but its plotting just the Job Size since that is first one I added under the measures.
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