Using Microsoft Power BI Q&A to ask about a specific field in a column

Yesterday I had the pleasure of hanging out with the Microsoft Modern Excel and Power BI user Group.  We were talking about Q&A and discovered, together, a method of asking about data based on the value of a specific column.  While using the Q&A feature of Microsoft Power BI, I have done things like “Show me the revenue where the state is MN” but I had asked in this method.  We were looking at revenue by Customer Age when someone wanted to know if I could call on a range of ages.  The answer is yes, and here are the results.  Also, check this group out, they are super cool!

Using DAX with Conditional Formatting in Microsoft Power BI

Tiny Tips

OK, I have this table visual in my Microsoft Power BI Report and I want to highlight a row if a column value is “Yes” but do nothing to the background if the value is “No”.  In this Tiny Tip video, I will show you how to achieve this very thing.

Today’s DAX Expression:

Hold Background Color =
VAR _HoldColor = SELECTEDVALUE(Customers[Hold])
RETURN
IF(_HoldColor = “Yes”, “#A0D1FF”)

 

 

Setting Geographic Data Categories in Microsoft Power BI Q&A

Tiny Tips

Ever use a map visual in Microsoft Power BI, but the locations are not correct?  In this Tiny Tip I will show you how to categorize geographic fields.  For example, we will take the city field and define it as a City.  If you were trying to display information for the city of New York, Texas, you would not want it to display as the state of New York.

Using a DAX function as a Report Title in Microsoft Power BI

Using the Card Visual as a Report Title and a value can save you space on a Microsoft Power BI Report.  Tiny Tips In this Tiny Tip I will show you how to make a DAX measure become text for a Report Title.  Because it is a visual, it will even be interactive with the remainder of the report!

Changing Interactions between visuals in Microsoft Power BI

Tiny TipsThe ability of visuals to interact with each other in Microsoft Power BI is probably one of the most powerful tools for letting your data talk to you, rather than reading the data.  However, sometimes you might need or want to control how the interactions work.  In this Tiny Tip, I will show you how to make changes to your report so interactions filter rather than highlight, or simply just not change a visual at all.