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.
I have 2 tables
that need relationships
I have an active relationship between the PMPE(Resource) as the Owner(Resource_Data_Table) that would show all projects made by the PMPE as the Owner.
the problem is, I need another relationship between the PMPE(Resource) as the Platform Engineer(Resource_Data_Table) that would show all projects by the PMPE as the Platform Engineer.
here's a screenshot of my tables:
I also created a bridge table to work around the many to many issue with power bi.
do you guys know how I can have 2 active relationships? or at least a workaround for this?
Thanks a lot!
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hello,
What you are trying to do is similar to handling role playing dimensions within power bi which is not possible due to the limitation of only 1 active join (relationship)
The ugly solution is to import "Resource_Data_Table" twice with different names into Power BI desktop, as if they are separate tables. Then you can an have active relationship to each table
I came across the following alternative method, in which a table can be 'cloned' within power bi, so you can clone Resource_Data_Table to a different name and use it for the 2nd join (relationship)
http://biinsight.com/role-playing-dimensions-in-power-bi/
The article below has another method if the values from the two joins (relationships) need to appear side-by-side. It involves writing a DAX expression. In short, DAX expressions can use an inactive relationship to fetch values, which is what happening here
http://biinsight.com/side-by-side-role-playing-dimensions-in-power-bi/
Hello,
What you are trying to do is similar to handling role playing dimensions within power bi which is not possible due to the limitation of only 1 active join (relationship)
The ugly solution is to import "Resource_Data_Table" twice with different names into Power BI desktop, as if they are separate tables. Then you can an have active relationship to each table
I came across the following alternative method, in which a table can be 'cloned' within power bi, so you can clone Resource_Data_Table to a different name and use it for the 2nd join (relationship)
http://biinsight.com/role-playing-dimensions-in-power-bi/
the limitation is truly a hindrance to what we want to show.
what I just did is to create a report in excel that shows the Platform Engineers without the Owners.
and uploaded it in Power BI
then connected to the bridge table to create the relationship with the other tables.
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 |
---|---|
113 | |
99 | |
80 | |
70 | |
59 |
User | Count |
---|---|
149 | |
114 | |
107 | |
89 | |
67 |