Welcome to the March edition of our Power BI Monthly Digest where we look at the new releases and updates in Power BI! As always, be sure to check out the video included in this post for a brief demo of these new features and updates. There are some interesting new things and some fixes that the PBI community has been requesting. Let’s take a look!
1. New Toolbar Ribbon –This new ribbon has been out in preview for a few months and now it is officially out. You’ll notice some changes, as well as new tabs depending on what you have selected such as new Table Tools and Column Tools tabs.
When working with data, one thing we noticed was the Edit Queries button was gone. We then noticed the word ‘queries’ under the Transform Data button; now when you click on Transform Data it will bring you to the Query Editor. So, there’s a different look and feel to the ribbon and some shifting around of things to give it a more Office feel, and even some integration with the Power Platform with things like a Power Apps button for insert capabilities.
Take some time and look around, there are lots of great new changes and capabilities that will make the Power BI experience even better.
2. Buttons – When we add buttons, we often make bookmarks for them to take users from one page to the next. The Power BI team has made this much simpler to do. Instead of a 10-15-minute process, we can have a page navigation demo done in 2-3 minutes! Much less planning and much more self-intuitive for users who can click on a button and it links to another page in the report.
3. Drill throughs with Buttons – This is in preview. Drill throughs has a new addition with buttons also. With this new addition we can click on a visual and drill through into another report.
Even better, you can now pick two visuals to cross-filter and drill through into a new report page. Here’s how I can add a drill through to a button:
4. Sorting on Tables – A small change but a highly requested one. If you’re a big Excel user, you may have worked in Power BI and wondered, why can’t I sort on multiple columns in Power BI? Well, now you can.
To do this, you simply select a column and hold down ‘Shift’ and then select a secondary sort column and it will sort based on the order in which you’ve selected them. A simple but great addition.
Line Charts – With this new update we can put 2 values on a line chart and get 2 ‘Y’ axis. Before we could do this with a combo chart with a line and column chart on top of each other with 2 different axes. Now you can do this just on a line chart.
When you select a line chart, you have a second Y axis that you can choose in the Visualizations pane shown as Y2. You simply drag over a value and put it in the Y2 field and your visual will now show the 2 different axes displaying the data.
For your end user, you’ll want to make it clear which line goes to which axis so be sure to make your two-color choices clear and maybe bold one.
5. Filter Pane – The new filter pane in preview will be going GA next month and the old one will be going away so be careful of that as some things may not carry over. What they’ve added this month is a search capability. If you have a lot of items that you want to potentially filter on, you may want to be able to search to find the specific element that you want to filter on.
You can do that now with the added search capability. So, if you have all the filters turned on in a report you can search to see what they are filtering and what we want to be filtering. You’ll find this new search bar right under the filter area. You can type something in, month for example, and it will return back any filters that are part of the visual or report page you’re looking at and then you can apply a filter to those months or whatever value you searched for.
6. Decomposition Tree – This visual is still in preview and it’s a popular one. But one thing people didn’t like was that you couldn’t set how many rows you could see on the tree. A new change allows us to select the number of bars we want to see, anywhere between 3 minimum and 30 maximum.
We simply go into the Tree field in Visualizations and set the max bars shown. If we set it to 3, it will show the first three, then we can hit the down arrow on our tree to see the next three. This corrects the issue of not seeing the true values of the data of the lower bars compared to the top category. Check out the video to see this in action.
7. New DAX function – Power BI has added the new DAX function called COALESCE. COALESCE is great for the end user visual. Any one can use this and see what they want to see without cluttering up space.
8. Generally Available – A few things going to into GA this month such as the Query Diagnostics feature inside the Transform Data Section (Query Editor).
9. Other - There’s also been some enhancement to the metadata that’s occurring behind the scenes inside of Power BI. Not a big impact to many of us immediately but it does make a big impact long term in the way Power BI is structuring the metadata. This is working towards continuity between Analysis Services Tabular and Power BI and the way they store the metadata.
A lot of interesting things this month. As always, let us know in the comments below which ones you like or are most excited about. Be sure to watch for next month’s edition of Power BI Monthly Digest!
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