Came across your video trying to solve this exact problem today. I needed to separate a list in a cell to separate columns prior to unpivoting. Your explanation was terrific and probably the most straightforward solution I've come across. Thanks!
Really amazing. Dynamic columns, even outside split, remains a very challenging area - like pivoting and unpivoting a dynamic list of columns. This video definitely helps.
Hi Chandeep. I've been watching your videos and I was going to reach out to see if there was a to dynamically split by delimiter. Although this is two years ago...... still something you have covered off that it so useful.
Really enjoyed the video, and found the use of the functions a great learning experience. For this example I think the list of names can be replaced with the number of columns, so you could have used the max number straight in the argument, although the video was more informative using the other way = let _max = List.Max(Table.AddColumn(Source,"Custom",each List.Count(Text.PositionOfAny([Hobbies],{","},Occurrence.All)))[Custom])+1 in Table.SplitColumn(Source, "Hobbies",Splitter.SplitTextByDelimiter(",", QuoteStyle.Csv),_max)
The BEST TEATCHER EVER about Power Query (M) language. Loving all videos about it. Thank you a lot for your great and amazing commitment to help world community. I wish all the best to you and your family!
Great presentation - excellent walkthrough of the critical thinking and problem-solving technique. I wonder if there's a way to do it in DAX, as well... Also... I, too, enjoy Hulking. Excellent choice, Rehet.
wow, this just came just at the right time. I have a use case where I have to do a report on dynamic product category/products. Just subscribed. thanks!
Brilliant!! This is exactly what I was looking for about a year ago, but I couldn't quite work out how to do it. I can't wait to implement this. I really like the way you explained all the step. THANK YOU!!! I have just subscribed :)
Great idea. I love the way you conserve steps and combine so much into each one. I do see an issue that will come up with steps beyond these dynamic columns. But I suppose that can be handled as the cases arise.
Thanks, Chandeep, I liked the part which you use Text.PositionOf for AllOccurance but for split by variable columns why do you make it really complicated?!!! Just remove the list in the last argument of Table.SplitColumn function. (then it will be dynamic for new columns)😉
This only works if the first row happens to have the max delimiters required, I have tried, and lets say if the first record has 2 delimiters, then you get 3 columns and no more.
@@martyc5674 Of course, I reached to this point and the solution is making Custom column as =List.Count(List.Split([Hobbies],",")) And before split, we must sort z to a this custom column. Still easier.
Thank you so much! I am having a problem in that I need to split a column up to 15 characters for example. The column has characters up to 15 and then a space and then another set of characters but within those first 15 characters there can also be spaces, So I can’t split by the delimiter of a space. And I can’t split by 15 characters because sometimes it is less than 15 characters. I need to make the split dynamic but I am very lost on what to tell it to do.
Wow 😲 Chandeep Amazing!, what a technique you taught. Please solve my problem also which I commented in another's video. How can I pass dynamic list into table.combine function.
I did this solution some time ago more for a "sport" activity. However, the easier way is to use to Text.Split which will convert the text into list, and then expand the list.
Thanks for the explanation. I've shorten it a bit. This avoids me having to clean up added columns in the end. The 'n' column, that contains the number of occurrences for ';' exists only inside the MaxAnswers step. I could also add it and then refer to a previous step, true... MaxAnswers = List.Max(Table.AddColumn(Source, "n", each List.Count(Text.PositionOf([Answers], ";", Occurrence.All)) + 1)[n]), HeadersAnswers = List.Transform({1..MaxAnswers}, each "Answer"&Text.From(_)),
I found a bug in the split function while working with a large dataset. I was manually applying a sequence of commands, with the split function in the middle. I was splitting a column using the delimiter ";;;". The columns had a varying number of delimiter occurrences, but I expected them to consistently generate 4 or 5 columns each. Only later did I realize that the split function was only generating 2 columns. I had to re-run the split operation, and only then did it generate the correct number of columns. Now, whenever I apply the split command, I wait for it to show the detected number of columns before applying it again.
This tutorial is great but it's not meeting my needs exactly. My issue is I have a list of names and I want to split them into columns by First Name, Middle Name or Initial, Last Name, and Suffix name. Not all have a suffix, middle int/name or period. when I split them last names go into the middle name column and I don't know how to bring it to the right column. When I split the delimiter one step at a time by the first name it's in the right column but when I split the second time I run into problems. How do I fix this?
Very interesting tutorial. But you didn't foresee that in the future you might list a little friend of your friends and that he will have other hobbies, for example football and Crying, just two hobbies, but football would deserve a new separate column and the current formula does not provide for this case .... :) :) Greetings.
Awesome trick however is there a way to sort the information. Let's say you asked 100 people and they chose a hobby but it appears any of them columns in the order it was split. Maybe you want a column based on the hobby type.
This solved my main issue to learn m code how to modify but couldn't we split the hobies by delimiter by row and then we get a unique list and refer that list this would solve issue if you have duplicate entries...
Chandeep, how do i dynamically split up to the second last value in PBI for each record? For e.g. I have a table with EE hierarchy for each user- For John, hierarchy is User1.User2.User3.User4 If John is User4, I want to split his hierarchy till User3. For Jane, hierarchy is User1.User2.User3.User4.User5 If Jane is User5, I want to split her hierarchy till User4 With the current setup, the columns are split into 5 columns by default, as there are 5 users in the table. So even though John is User4, the columns are split into 5 columns, where the 4th column consists of John's name. This is how the columns are split: User 1 | User 2 | User 3 | User 4 | User 5 M1 | M2 | M3 | John | NULL M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | Jane I want the columns to stop at User 3 for John, so column USER 4 should be NULL as well Any way to split the columns based on each record, rather than looking at the maximum number of splits in the table?
Other functions, e.g. Text.Combine uses a list to reference the columns to be combined. So far I was unable to define a list similar to this example to get this function working. Was anybody more successful with Text.Combine? Seb
I have a table with three columns Col1 … Col3. I merge the columns into a new column via add column / merge column with gives this M code: = Table.AddColumn(Source, "ColCombine", each Text.Combine({[Col1], [Col2], [Col3]}, "|"), type text) I wanted to do something similar to your video that I have a formula like = Table.AddColumn(Source, "ColCombine", each Text.Combine(ListColHeading, "|"), type text) So far I did not manage to create a List that the content of [Col1], [Col2], [Col3] is referenced - did I explain okay?
A possible solution is using Table.CombineColumns instead of merging the columns into a new column. The steps to perform are - Creating the list “ColList” from the tables header - Transforming every column into type text using “ColList“ in combination with Table.TransformColumnTypes - Applying Table.CombineColumns in combination with “ColList“ Code could look like this: Source … IntoText = Table.TransformColumnTypes(Source, List.Transform(ColList, each {_, type text})), CombineCols = Table.CombineColumns(IntoText,ColList,Combiner.CombineTextByDelimiter(":", QuoteStyle.None),"ColsCombined") I got the inspiration for this from the video 😉 th-cam.com/video/1fn8fXYw6M4/w-d-xo.html
Check out our newly launched M Language course ↗ - goodly.co.in/learn-m-powerquery/
Came across your video trying to solve this exact problem today. I needed to separate a list in a cell to separate columns prior to unpivoting. Your explanation was terrific and probably the most straightforward solution I've come across. Thanks!
Awesome Chandeep! Very clever.. as always. Thanks for walking through the steps.. well explained and easy to follow. Thumbs up!!
Glad you like it 😊
Really amazing. Dynamic columns, even outside split, remains a very challenging area - like pivoting and unpivoting a dynamic list of columns. This video definitely helps.
Hi Chandeep. I've been watching your videos and I was going to reach out to see if there was a to dynamically split by delimiter. Although this is two years ago...... still something you have covered off that it so useful.
Really enjoyed the video, and found the use of the functions a great learning experience.
For this example I think the list of names can be replaced with the number of columns, so you could have used the max number straight in the argument, although the video was more informative using the other way
= let
_max = List.Max(Table.AddColumn(Source,"Custom",each List.Count(Text.PositionOfAny([Hobbies],{","},Occurrence.All)))[Custom])+1
in
Table.SplitColumn(Source, "Hobbies",Splitter.SplitTextByDelimiter(",", QuoteStyle.Csv),_max)
Amazing....The only guy on TH-cam who can teach power query transformation like bread & butter... Kudus Chandeep for this awesome playlist. ❤❤
Thanks a ton 😉
Extraordinary result, thank you very much for sharing this type of solutions, personally it has helped me a lot.
Greetings from Chile
Glad it was helpful 💚
The BEST TEATCHER EVER about Power Query (M) language. Loving all videos about it. Thank you a lot for your great and amazing commitment to help world community. I wish all the best to you and your family!
Glad you are loving the videos 😊
Great video, I'm sure these techniques can be used for many other problems.
Glad it was helful 😊
This technique blows my mind. I think M query can makes our work faster.. Thanks for sharing this knowledge. 👍
Great presentation - excellent walkthrough of the critical thinking and problem-solving technique. I wonder if there's a way to do it in DAX, as well...
Also... I, too, enjoy Hulking. Excellent choice, Rehet.
Glorious! Mastering as always Chandeep, many thanks for sharing!
Glad you like it Jose! 😊
wow, this just came just at the right time. I have a use case where I have to do a report on dynamic product category/products. Just subscribed. thanks!
You are a wizard with this. Thanks for sharing!!!
Glad you like it 😊
Thank you so much. You explain the concept so well.
I'm going to apply this to a problem I have. Thanks again!
Glad you like it
Always cutting-edge, Chandeep. Thanks!
Glad you like it 😊
Thank you, this video has saved my day!
Glad it was helpful 💚
As always, very clever. Mind blown regarding not having to to refer to the immediately proceeding applied step. Well done.
Glad you like it 😊
Excelente, me ayudó el tutorial para aplicarlo en un reporte, saludos desde Perú.
Thanks for demonstrating the procedure of solving the problem really amazing
mind blown. great tutorial and great explanation!!!!!
Fabulous! Thanks for the clear explanation.
Brilliant!! This is exactly what I was looking for about a year ago, but I couldn't quite work out how to do it. I can't wait to implement this. I really like the way you explained all the step. THANK YOU!!! I have just subscribed :)
Fantastic!
Great idea. I love the way you conserve steps and combine so much into each one. I do see an issue that will come up with steps beyond these dynamic columns. But I suppose that can be handled as the cases arise.
Great solution as always. I've learned so much on your channel. Thanks for sharing
Just the tip I was looking for, Thank you! :)
Glad I could help!
Excellent way to deal with this types of queries. Thanks
Glad you like it 😊
Thx from Brazil! 💚💛
Welcome!
I don't know why I keep watching your videos (atleast 3 a day) without any use !!!
Thanks Chandeep for sharing this brilliant content.
Glad you liked it!
You are... just unbelivable 🙂 Thank you!
Thanks Ales!
Excellent video...great explanation....subscribed.
Fantastic! Beautiful! Thanks for sharing.
glad you like this
This great content, cheer for your good work! 👍🎉
Glad you like! 💚
Very, very cool and handy tip!!
Glad you liked it
As always amazing stuff Chandeep
Thank you 😊
This is amazing, exactly what I needed.
Can I ask, how do you come up with this logic/idea? Does it come naturally or..
Great video! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks, Chandeep, I liked the part which you use Text.PositionOf for AllOccurance but for split by variable columns why do you make it really complicated?!!!
Just remove the list in the last argument of Table.SplitColumn function. (then it will be dynamic for new columns)😉
Didn't know that.. thanks
Wow-- That works really well.. makes me wonder if lots of hardcoded lists in M are Optional Arguments
This only works if the first row happens to have the max delimiters required, I have tried, and lets say if the first record has 2 delimiters, then you get 3 columns and no more.
@@martyc5674 Of course, I reached to this point and the solution is making Custom column as =List.Count(List.Split([Hobbies],","))
And before split, we must sort z to a this custom column.
Still easier.
Thank you so much! I am having a problem in that I need to split a column up to 15 characters for example. The column has characters up to 15 and then a space and then another set of characters but within those first 15 characters there can also be spaces, So I can’t split by the delimiter of a space. And I can’t split by 15 characters because sometimes it is less than 15 characters. I need to make the split dynamic but I am very lost on what to tell it to do.
Great video, thanks! Your son sounds cool 😀
Thanks Man!
Very well put together video
Glad you enjoyed!
Love it! but is there also a way to covert it each in a rows rather than columns?
Excellent Chandeep 👍👍
This is great, can also be used with loading PDF, and so on, thank you!
Wow 😲 Chandeep Amazing!, what a technique you taught. Please solve my problem also which I commented in another's video. How can I pass dynamic list into table.combine function.
Awesome! 👍
I did this solution some time ago more for a "sport" activity. However, the easier way is to use to Text.Split which will convert the text into list, and then expand the list.
Thanks for the explanation.
I've shorten it a bit.
This avoids me having to clean up added columns in the end. The 'n' column, that contains the number of occurrences for ';' exists only inside the MaxAnswers step.
I could also add it and then refer to a previous step, true...
MaxAnswers = List.Max(Table.AddColumn(Source, "n", each List.Count(Text.PositionOf([Answers], ";", Occurrence.All)) + 1)[n]),
HeadersAnswers = List.Transform({1..MaxAnswers}, each "Answer"&Text.From(_)),
Great content!
thanks for great tutorial! what if there would be more columns like Hobbies_1, Hobbies_2 and few items in each of them?
Is it possible to have unique values only in the columns?
In your example, the "sleeping" value would have its own column.
Great lesson once again.... Sir pls help to understand how get total of if we have numbers in place of Hobbies. Pls help sir...
It is awesome chandeep sir,
Can you please help me how can we add multiple custom columns in single step at power query
Excellent. Thank you very much!
Glad you like it 😊
I found a bug in the split function while working with a large dataset. I was manually applying a sequence of commands, with the split function in the middle. I was splitting a column using the delimiter ";;;". The columns had a varying number of delimiter occurrences, but I expected them to consistently generate 4 or 5 columns each.
Only later did I realize that the split function was only generating 2 columns. I had to re-run the split operation, and only then did it generate the correct number of columns. Now, whenever I apply the split command, I wait for it to show the detected number of columns before applying it again.
Very Goodly,my good sir! 🔥👊🏽🔥
Thanks Oz. Glad to see you here!
Hi Chandeep,
Did you do a video on how to remove duplicates when column values can be swapped like (1,2) and (2,1) would be a duplicate. Thanks
Excellent video once again. Does Rehet means Happiness?
it means calm
Just amezing❤❤
Amazing ❤
Great Video!!
Thank you 💚
Now I want to trim (or do some other function) to all of the columns.. Can you think of a good way to do that?
Great 💯👍
Finished watching
The red color code is hard code,to modify them is a good job.
my report have an uneven space length.. is there a way to split them?
This tutorial is great but it's not meeting my needs exactly. My issue is I have a list of names and I want to split them into columns by First Name, Middle Name or Initial, Last Name, and Suffix name. Not all have a suffix, middle int/name or period. when I split them last names go into the middle name column and I don't know how to bring it to the right column. When I split the delimiter one step at a time by the first name it's in the right column but when I split the second time I run into problems. How do I fix this?
Can you please send me some dummy data and describe the problem clearly - goodly.wordpress@gmail.com
Thank you!
Very interesting tutorial.
But you didn't foresee that in the future you might list a little friend of your friends and that he will have other hobbies, for example football and Crying, just two hobbies, but football would deserve a new separate column and the current formula does not provide for this case .... :) :)
Greetings.
Wow just wow ...
Thanks 😊
Thank you!
Great video
💚
Hello where to find your fundamental course.
goodly.podia.com/power-bi-beginner-course
Hi I have some need in data
Awesome trick however is there a way to sort the information.
Let's say you asked 100 people and they chose a hobby but it appears any of them columns in the order it was split.
Maybe you want a column based on the hobby type.
You are genius
Thank you! 😊
This solved my main issue to learn m code how to modify but couldn't we split the hobies by delimiter by row and then we get a unique list and refer that list this would solve issue if you have duplicate entries...
Yes there could be many ways of solving such problems
Yes, And you know it all... You explain things very well..and i think far better than anyone else when it comes to power query.....
Chandeep, how do i dynamically split up to the second last value in PBI for each record?
For e.g. I have a table with EE hierarchy for each user-
For John, hierarchy is User1.User2.User3.User4
If John is User4, I want to split his hierarchy till User3.
For Jane, hierarchy is User1.User2.User3.User4.User5
If Jane is User5, I want to split her hierarchy till User4
With the current setup, the columns are split into 5 columns by default, as there are 5 users in the table.
So even though John is User4, the columns are split into 5 columns, where the 4th column consists of John's name.
This is how the columns are split:
User 1 | User 2 | User 3 | User 4 | User 5
M1 | M2 | M3 | John | NULL
M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | Jane
I want the columns to stop at User 3 for John, so column USER 4 should be NULL as well
Any way to split the columns based on each record, rather than looking at the maximum number of splits in the table?
Other functions, e.g. Text.Combine uses a list to reference the columns to be combined. So far I was unable to define a list similar to this example to get this function working. Was anybody more successful with Text.Combine? Seb
Sorry what is the issue that you're facing.
Text.Combine works on a list (and not a column references)
I have a table with three columns Col1 … Col3. I merge the columns into a new column via add column / merge column with gives this M code:
= Table.AddColumn(Source, "ColCombine", each Text.Combine({[Col1], [Col2], [Col3]}, "|"), type text)
I wanted to do something similar to your video that I have a formula like
= Table.AddColumn(Source, "ColCombine", each Text.Combine(ListColHeading, "|"), type text)
So far I did not manage to create a List that the content of [Col1], [Col2], [Col3] is referenced - did I explain okay?
A possible solution is using Table.CombineColumns instead of merging the columns into a new column. The steps to perform are
- Creating the list “ColList” from the tables header
- Transforming every column into type text using “ColList“ in combination with Table.TransformColumnTypes
- Applying Table.CombineColumns in combination with “ColList“
Code could look like this:
Source …
IntoText = Table.TransformColumnTypes(Source, List.Transform(ColList, each {_, type text})),
CombineCols = Table.CombineColumns(IntoText,ColList,Combiner.CombineTextByDelimiter(":", QuoteStyle.None),"ColsCombined")
I got the inspiration for this from the video 😉 th-cam.com/video/1fn8fXYw6M4/w-d-xo.html
Apart from your video, I have a question, is there any way to fetch data from Facebook by using a power query?
www.goodly.co.in/facebook-dashboard-in-excel/
Golden!
Thanks!
Hello People, Goodly FC here ! :D
What is the difference between
each & _ ??
When use this or this ????
each is they keyword that let's you access each row of a table or a list.
_ is the keyword to reference each item in the list or table.
Very good
Thanks!
that's amazing
Thanks 😊
Thank you
Great!
Thanks 😊
You made the step look fancy but it happens to me not remember the syntax.
Bravo
Cheers!
Cheers! Thanks!
It is nice
Thanks!
SAVING LIIIIIIVESSSSSSS
Thank You!
💯👍
Super duber
Thanks!
#powerbinareal
Hello bro
Plz share email for contecting