Skip to main content
cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Earn a 50% discount on the DP-600 certification exam by completing the Fabric 30 Days to Learn It challenge.

Reply
OlegV
Helper III
Helper III

Combine two tables

Hello,

I have created two calculated tables. 

But I need to have only one.

 

Could you please tell me how can I combine them in one query?

 

I tried to use summarize, but it cannot see fileds of the variable.

 

Here are the codes:

table1 =

VAR SelectedSalesOrders =

    SELECTCOLUMNS(

        FILTER(

            'SalesOrders',

            'SalesOrders'[Date ordered] >= DATE(YEAR(TODAY()), 1, 1) &&

            'SalesOrders'[SO Line type] <> "6"

        ),

        "Company&SalesOrder&StockCode", 'SalesOrders'[Company] & 'SalesOrders'[Sales Order] & 'SalesOrders'[Stock Code]

    )

 

VAR WIPjobsColumns =

    SELECTCOLUMNS(

        WIPJobs,

        "Jobs", 'WIPJobs'[Job],

        "Company&SalesOrder&StockCode", 'WIPJobs'[Company] & 'WIPJobs'[Sales Order] & 'WIPJobs'[Stock Code]

    )

 

VAR LeftJoin1 =

    NATURALLEFTOUTERJOIN(SelectedSalesOrders, WIPjobsColumns)

 

RETURN

  distinct ( LeftJoin1)

 

 

 


Table 2 =

SUMMARIZE(

    'table1',

    'table1'[Jobs]

)

 

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION
AmiraBedh
Resident Rockstar
Resident Rockstar

 

 

 

VAR CombinedTable =
VAR SelectedSalesOrders =
    SELECTCOLUMNS(
        FILTER(
            'SalesOrders',
            'SalesOrders'[Date ordered] >= DATE(YEAR(TODAY()), 1, 1) &&
            'SalesOrders'[SO Line type] <> "6"
        ),
        "Company&SalesOrder&StockCode", 'SalesOrders'[Company] & 'SalesOrders'[Sales Order] & 'SalesOrders'[Stock Code]
    )

VAR WIPjobsColumns =
    SELECTCOLUMNS(
        WIPJobs,
        "Jobs", 'WIPJobs'[Job],
        "Company&SalesOrder&StockCode", 'WIPJobs'[Company] & 'WIPJobs'[Sales Order] & 'WIPJobs'[Stock Code]
    )

VAR LeftJoin1 =
    NATURALLEFTOUTERJOIN(SelectedSalesOrders, WIPjobsColumns)

RETURN
    DISTINCT ( SELECTCOLUMNS(LeftJoin1, "Jobs", [Jobs]) )

// Or if you want to summarize based on Jobs and perform aggregation, you can do something like this:
// SUMMARIZE(LeftJoin1, [Jobs], "SomeAggregatedValue", SUM('WIPJobs'[SomeColumnForAggregation]))

RETURN
  CombinedTable

You need to perform the join and selection operations as you did in table1 and then immediately summarize the resulting table in the same query. However, since SUMMARIZE is typically used for grouping data and performing aggregations, and you seem to want to list Jobs uniquely, you might consider using DISTINCT if you're just listing distinct Jobs values. If you need additional aggregation, you can include those in the SUMMARIZE. 


Proud to be a Power BI Super User !

Microsoft Community : https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/users/AmiraBedhiafi
Linkedin : https://www.linkedin.com/in/amira-bedhiafi/
StackOverflow : https://stackoverflow.com/users/9517769/amira-bedhiafi
C-Sharp Corner : https://www.c-sharpcorner.com/members/amira-bedhiafi
Power BI Community :https://community.powerbi.com/t5/user/viewprofilepage/user-id/332696

View solution in original post

3 REPLIES 3
AmiraBedh
Resident Rockstar
Resident Rockstar

 

 

 

VAR CombinedTable =
VAR SelectedSalesOrders =
    SELECTCOLUMNS(
        FILTER(
            'SalesOrders',
            'SalesOrders'[Date ordered] >= DATE(YEAR(TODAY()), 1, 1) &&
            'SalesOrders'[SO Line type] <> "6"
        ),
        "Company&SalesOrder&StockCode", 'SalesOrders'[Company] & 'SalesOrders'[Sales Order] & 'SalesOrders'[Stock Code]
    )

VAR WIPjobsColumns =
    SELECTCOLUMNS(
        WIPJobs,
        "Jobs", 'WIPJobs'[Job],
        "Company&SalesOrder&StockCode", 'WIPJobs'[Company] & 'WIPJobs'[Sales Order] & 'WIPJobs'[Stock Code]
    )

VAR LeftJoin1 =
    NATURALLEFTOUTERJOIN(SelectedSalesOrders, WIPjobsColumns)

RETURN
    DISTINCT ( SELECTCOLUMNS(LeftJoin1, "Jobs", [Jobs]) )

// Or if you want to summarize based on Jobs and perform aggregation, you can do something like this:
// SUMMARIZE(LeftJoin1, [Jobs], "SomeAggregatedValue", SUM('WIPJobs'[SomeColumnForAggregation]))

RETURN
  CombinedTable

You need to perform the join and selection operations as you did in table1 and then immediately summarize the resulting table in the same query. However, since SUMMARIZE is typically used for grouping data and performing aggregations, and you seem to want to list Jobs uniquely, you might consider using DISTINCT if you're just listing distinct Jobs values. If you need additional aggregation, you can include those in the SUMMARIZE. 


Proud to be a Power BI Super User !

Microsoft Community : https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/users/AmiraBedhiafi
Linkedin : https://www.linkedin.com/in/amira-bedhiafi/
StackOverflow : https://stackoverflow.com/users/9517769/amira-bedhiafi
C-Sharp Corner : https://www.c-sharpcorner.com/members/amira-bedhiafi
Power BI Community :https://community.powerbi.com/t5/user/viewprofilepage/user-id/332696

Thank you very much. It has worked.

I understood my mistake now.

Glad to help 🙂


Proud to be a Power BI Super User !

Microsoft Community : https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/users/AmiraBedhiafi
Linkedin : https://www.linkedin.com/in/amira-bedhiafi/
StackOverflow : https://stackoverflow.com/users/9517769/amira-bedhiafi
C-Sharp Corner : https://www.c-sharpcorner.com/members/amira-bedhiafi
Power BI Community :https://community.powerbi.com/t5/user/viewprofilepage/user-id/332696

Helpful resources

Announcements
RTI Forums Carousel3

New forum boards available in Real-Time Intelligence.

Ask questions in Eventhouse and KQL, Eventstream, and Reflex.

MayPowerBICarousel

Fabric Monthly Update - May 2024

Check out the May 2024 Fabric update to learn about new features.

LearnSurvey

Fabric certifications survey

Certification feedback opportunity for the community.