I am using Power Bi to produce several reports, one of it is the NPS score for support. However, I am coming across an issue with the clustered column chart. It is showing the value against the total number rather than for each row.
What I want to see if the following (within Excel),
The NPS score is shown as a percentage for each week.
e.g. Week 3 has the Promoter at 95.5% and Detractor at 4.5%
However, when using Power Bi, I am shown the following, which is a Percentage of the grand total, instead of each week.
Using a Matrix, I could see the following as total numbers.
I can copy this Matrix and show it as a Percentage of each Row, which is also correctly showing the results.
I have the dates already set up using a feeder table to allow me to get the week number etc from a date within the main raw data, so they sort in the correct order..
My Chart is using the following table entries
Cal Week and WeekNo are both from the feeder table (Fiscal)
Net Promoter and Count of Case Num are from the RawData table.
How can I get the chart to show the percentages per week instead of the total?
I am also planning to use slicers to filter down further, for example, Regions (which are in the RawData).
I believe I will need to add an extra column to the RawData, but no idea what to put in it and then how to use that in the chart, and still allow it to slice.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
DD
Related
Im fairly sure what im attempting is not the ideal way to do things due to my lack of knowledge of power BI but here goes:
I have two tables in the form of:
One has the actual power against wind and the other is a reference
I created calculated columns that add a corresponding binned speed to each row (so 1-2, 2-3, 3-4 etc)
I have filters and slicers applied on the page / visual that will keep changing.
What i want is to create a pivot or a grouped table that is changed dynamically based on my filters.
The reason i want this is currently the table ive got has totals that are averaged (because individual row is averaged) but i want a sum of an average by category. If i can have this as a calculated table instead of a visual (picture below) i would likely be able to aggregate this again to get what i want
so on the above table i want to totals to be sum of individual rows. I also want to be able to use these totals to carry out other calculations (simple stuff like total divided by fixed number etc)
I want to create a graph which shows the total capacity for each week relative to remaining availability across a series of specific dates. Just now when I attempt this in Power Bi it calculates this correctly for one of the values (remaining availability) but generates a value much higher than expected by manual calculation for the total capacity - instead showing the total for the entire column rather than for each specific date.
Why is Power Bi doing this and how can I solve it?
So far, I have tried generating the graph like this:
(https://i.stack.imgur.com/GV3vk.png)
and as you can see the capacity values are incredibly high they should be 25 days.
The total availability values are correct (ranging from 0 to 5.5 days).
When I create matrices to see the sum breakdown they are correct but it only appears to be that when combined together one of the values changes to the value for the whole column.
If anyone could help me with this issue that would be great! Thanks!
I am trying to show the change in moving average by county on a map.
Currently, I have the calculated field for this:
IF ISNULL(LOOKUP(SUM([Covid Count]),-14)) THEN NULL ELSE
WINDOW_AVG(SUM([Covid Count]), -7, 0)-WINDOW_AVG(SUM([Covid Count]), -14, -7)
END
This works in creating a line graph where I filter the dates to only include 15 consecutive dates. This results in one point with the correct change in average.
I would like this to number to be plotted on a map but it says there are just null values.
The formula is only one part of defining a table calculation (a class of calculations performed client side tableau taking the aggregate query results returned from the data source)
Equally critical are the dimensions in play on the view to determine the level of detail of the query, and the instructions you provide to tell Tableau how to slice up or layout the query results before applying the table calc formula. This critical step is known as setting the “partitioning and addressing” for the table calc, sometimes also as setting the “compute using”. Read about it in the online help for table calcs. You can experiment with using the Edit Table Calc dialog by clicking on the corresponding pill.
In short, you probably have to a dimension, such as your Date field to some shelf - likely the detail shelf, and the set the partitioning and addressing, probably to partition by county and address by state.
If you have more than a couple of weeks of data, then you’ll get multiple marks per county. You may need to decide how to handle that on your map.
I want to plot a graph over a year+weeknumber on the x axis.
Each data-point contains this specific value; for example week 7 of 2016 is expressed as 201607 etc. and called YearWeek
I created a date table in which I calculate all possible YearWeek value in a certain date-range. Then I created a YearWeek table extracting all distinct YearWeeks.
This I connected to the Fact-Table. What I want to chart is exactly according to this matrix:
Note that I explicitly selected to show items with no data to obtain the full time line. It continues down to 201852 but you get the picture.
When I attempt to plot this, it results in this:
It's hopefully clear that the straight lines running from 201652 to 201700 and 201752 to 201800 are the problem.
There's three things to note:
I explicitly need to keep the x-axis continuous, no gaps in the plots or x-axis values skipping several weeks for lack of data.
PowerBI somehow does not want to accept that these values count to 52 and then continue in the next year and decides to make the values strictly numerical despite these values not existing in the YearWeek dimension table.
If I change the values to text, PowerBI recognises that these are distinct categories, but it won't provide a continuous axis, just the values for which there is data.
I've tried to connect the YearWeek Dim table to an actual Date Dim table hoping that time intelligence would kick in; the problem is that both for the Fact Table and the Date Dimension table the YearWeek Dim is the unique value which won't work given the filter-direction. If I start messing with many to many relationships or bi-directional filtering I'm out of my depth.
How to fix this?
I am a very basic user of tableau and I have not found an answer to my question.
I have a txt file that has historical daily data for 98% of all the stocks in the US, with their daily capitalization. Each stocks has its TICKER, Daily Market Value for every trading day of the year, and its SECTOR.
I did a simple time series that display SUM([Mktval]) (sum of all individual market values) across all stocks, on a daily daily, and where I can see that the total value as of 2016 is about 24 Trillion USD, as in the image below.
When I change the view column from DAY to YEAR, I don't see the right values, but something a lot larger. So I realized that I need to do SUM([Mktval])/252 to get the right value for a year (there are 252 trading days in a year).
If I change the view to MONTH, as in the chart below, the numbers are again wrong because 252 is not the right value to use in the division.
Is there any way that Tableau can adjust the values automatically to reflect the AVG MktVal across different time intervals?
Thanks
Replace SUM(Mktval) on the Rows shelf with the following calculated field
avg({ fixed day(Date1) : sum(Mktval) })
That solution is all in one step. It is perhaps a bit more clear to use 2 steps. First, create a calculated field called total_daily_market_value defined as
{ fixed day(Date1) : sum(Mktval) }
Then make sure that calculated field is a measure. It is an LOD calculation that you can think of as a separate table with one value for each day showing the total market value for that day.
Drag that measure to a shelf, and then change the aggregation function to AVG(), MEDIAN(), MIN(), MAX() or STDEV() as desired. Tableau will aggregate the total_daily_market_value using your chosen aggregation function for whatever values of Date1 are in your view.