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RL1
Frequent Visitor

Split column based on text and numerical characters

Hi,

 

I'm trying to split a column that contains text and number components into two seperate columns, one containing the text characters and another containing the numbers. 

 

i.e. I want to go from the single column:

 

AB143

A122

VHG309

X12

XX13

 

to two columns containing:

 

AB                   143

A                     122

VHG                309

X                     12

XX                   13

 

Is this possible within Power BI?

Thanks.

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Instead I would propose Text.PositionOfAny as illustrated in this video.

 

Relevant parts of the code generated during video recording ("PreviousStep" is the name of your previous step):

 

    #"Added Custom" = Table.AddColumn(PreviousStep, "Custom", each Text.PositionOfAny([Column1],{"0".."9"})),
    #"Inserted First Characters" = Table.AddColumn(#"Added Custom", "First Characters", each Text.Start([Column1], [Custom]), type text),
    #"Inserted Text Range" = Table.AddColumn(#"Inserted First Characters", "Text Range", each Text.Middle([Column1], [Custom]), type text),
    #"Removed Columns" = Table.RemoveColumns(#"Inserted Text Range",{"Column1", "Custom"}),
    #"Renamed Columns" = Table.RenameColumns(#"Removed Columns",{{"Text Range", "Number"}}),
    #"Changed Type1" = Table.TransformColumnTypes(#"Renamed Columns",{{"Number", Int64.Type}})
Specializing in Power Query Formula Language (M)

View solution in original post

4 REPLIES 4
Greg_Deckler
Super User
Super User

You could potentially use PostionOfAny function:

 

List.PositionOfAny("ABCBA", {"A","B"}, Occurrence.All) equals {0,1,3,4}  

You would probably have to use an M custom function or another function to return the lowest value in the list and then feed that to a Split.

 

 


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The Definitive Guide to Power Query (M)

DAX is easy, CALCULATE makes DAX hard...

Instead I would propose Text.PositionOfAny as illustrated in this video.

 

Relevant parts of the code generated during video recording ("PreviousStep" is the name of your previous step):

 

    #"Added Custom" = Table.AddColumn(PreviousStep, "Custom", each Text.PositionOfAny([Column1],{"0".."9"})),
    #"Inserted First Characters" = Table.AddColumn(#"Added Custom", "First Characters", each Text.Start([Column1], [Custom]), type text),
    #"Inserted Text Range" = Table.AddColumn(#"Inserted First Characters", "Text Range", each Text.Middle([Column1], [Custom]), type text),
    #"Removed Columns" = Table.RemoveColumns(#"Inserted Text Range",{"Column1", "Custom"}),
    #"Renamed Columns" = Table.RenameColumns(#"Removed Columns",{{"Text Range", "Number"}}),
    #"Changed Type1" = Table.TransformColumnTypes(#"Renamed Columns",{{"Number", Int64.Type}})
Specializing in Power Query Formula Language (M)

That works well (& video was very helpful).

 

Thanks.

If you could get your cell addresses as $A$1 rather that A1, you could simply split columns based on the delimiter $.

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