ALLEXCEPT

Stairway to DAX and Power BI

Stairway to DAX and Power BI - Level 16: The DAX ALLEXCEPT() Function

  • Stairway Step

Business Intelligence Architect, Analysis Services Maestro, and author Bill Pearson introduces the DAX ALLEXCEPT() function, discussing its syntax, uses and operation. He then provides hands-on exposure to ALLEXCEPT(), focusing largely upon its most popular use in removing filters from all columns in a table - except the filters we specify.

5 (1)

You rated this post out of 5. Change rating

2024-01-16 (first published: )

4,706 reads

Blogs

AI Step 1

By

As this is an Artificial Intelligence (AI) World, things are changing. We can see that...

Beginner’s Guide: Building a Dockerized Todo App with React, Chakra UI, and Rust for Backend

By

In a containerized app, React and Chakra UI provide a robust and accessible user...

A New Word: Nachlophobia

By

nachlophobia – n. the fear that your deepest connections with people are ultimately pretty...

Read the latest Blogs

Forums

identify consecutive records greater than 1

By HeftSteady

Hello I need help identifying all records that have consecutive hours (time in order)...

Call dynamic sql storedprocedure from SSIS execute sql task

By komal145

hi, I have a table called Rules Create table Rules ( Id int ,...

Migrating database with many orphan users.

By JasonO

I am currently upgrading a very old database running SQL Server 2008 to SQL...

Visit the forum

Question of the Day

The Funny SELECTs

What is returned from this query?

SELECT
  ( SELECT COUNT (*) FROM Sales.SalesOrderHeader AS soh
    WHERE soh.OrderDate >= '01/01/2011' AND soh.OrderDate < '01/01/2012') AS OrdersIn2011
, ( SELECT COUNT (*) FROM Sales.SalesOrderHeader AS soh
    WHERE soh.OrderDate >= '01/01/2012' AND soh.OrderDate < '01/01/2013') AS OrdersIn2012
, ( SELECT COUNT (*) FROM Sales.SalesOrderHeader AS soh
    WHERE soh.OrderDate >= '01/01/2013' AND soh.OrderDate < '01/01/2014') AS OrdersIn2013;

See possible answers