This week’s video is about a side of DAX that most people don’t explore enough,
not changing the calculation itself, but changing how it appears.
I cover 3 really useful tricks.
Replace Nested IFs with
SWITCH
Nested IFs are fine for simple
logic. But once you have multiple conditions, they quickly become hard to read
and maintain.
SWITCH
gives you a much cleaner way to handle that. I’ve explained this in
detail in this video.
A Really Cool Use of
Context Transition in DAX
This is a fun example of context transition in DAX.
The measure finds the best selling date inside the current filter context and
dynamically returns both the date and the sales value together.
A really good way to understand how filter context changes calculation
behaviour in DAX.
This course is for
the point where YouTube is no longer enough
You can learn a lot from free videos. But after a point, random tutorials stop
being enough, especially in DAX.
Because DAX is not just about writing formulas. It’s about understanding logic,
context, and modelling well enough that when a real reporting problem shows up,
you know how to think through it and solve it with confidence.
If that’s where you are right now, my DAX & Data Modeling Course will help
you go much deeper.
It’s built to take you beyond isolated tricks and help you learn DAX and data
modeling in a much more structured way, so you don’t just follow examples, but
actually understand the logic and apply it to your own harder data problems.
If that’s the stage you’re at, I think you’ll get a lot out of the course.
Quick question - what challenges are you facing with Al when
it comes to Data Analysis? Is it living up to your expectations? Tell me
everything...
Hit reply, I am all ears. I might reply to your email if I have further
questions.
Planning our July offsite with the full team from both Goodly and Goodly
Insights