I'm trying to parse some text from email into an excel spreadsheet. You can see my first post here, the basic premise is we're sending out text forms for users to fill out and send back. We want to automate the responses into an Excel spreadsheet. Some of the questions are the same (first name, last name, etc.) but I want them to go into different rows. @ScottShearer was kind enough to give me a starting point.

A new month means it's time to celebrate and welcome the new user groups that have joined our community. We are excited to announce that we have more than 8 New Groups, which is no surprise after the amazing Microsoft Power Platform Conference. This month, we are breaking them out by the different community categories. If your group is listed here, give this post a kudo so we can celebrate with you!Don't forget to take a look at the many events happening near you or virtually! It's a great time of year to connect and engage with User Groups both locally and online. Please Welcome Our NEW User Groups Power Platform:PowerIT User Group: NottinghamPower Platform User Group: BergenPower Platform User Group: DanmarkNashville Power Platform User GroupMicrosoft Ambassador Program y Mujer Latina Technolochicas NCWIT CommunityCopilot Studio: Copilot User Group ItaliaDynamics365:Dynamics User Group AdriaticDynamic 365 Azerbaijan December User Group Events 01 Dec 2023Aprendiendo Desarrollo web, creando mi primer power app y power page.01 Dec 2023 Q4 Hybrid Philadelphia Dynamics 365 & Power Platform User Group Meeting05 Dec 2023APAC Dynamics 365 FastTrack Bootcamp - BI and Analytics07 Dec 2023Bay Area Power Platform Meetup: Learn, Share, and Connect07 Dec 2023Indiana D365/AX December User Group Meeting07 Dec 2023Dynamics User Group Meeting: Houston09 Dec 2023December '23 - NEW Power Apps User Group Meeting - Online12 Dec 2023December Cleveland Power Platform User Group Meeting12 Dec 2023RW2 Data Stewardship Open Forum Discussion13 Dec 2023 Black Country Power Platform User Group - December 2023 - West Midlands


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When swapping back to the excel data source as per the original post, I cannot filter on both Column1 and Column2 at the same time using the above filter statement (which is delegable). While using the "&&" has worked, it is not delegable and therefore not optimal.

@David_MorrisĀ 


A general rule is excel should only be used as a data source for learning how to PowerApps. if you're going to be making an app for use then at a minimum you should be using SharePoint as a data source


you can export / connect to a SharePoint list from excel if people need to use the data in that way but should never really be the basis of a power app data source

Simplify your workflow, save time, and minimize errors by leveraging the Power PDF Filler Add-In for Microsoft Excel. It can easily fill in thousands of PDF forms for you! Try it today and experience the power of automated PDF form filling.

i am preparing a power bi report using the excel data source. I have around 300 rows in excel which i want to display in power bi in exact same way. Eg: row 1 in excel should be displayed in row 1 in power bi and likewise other rows as well. i dont have an unique column and cannot even sort it on basis of any particular column. But i would need it in a exact samer way as i have in excel. is there any way to freeze the rows in same place in power bi as we have in excel ? How can i achieve that?

Fields are automatically sorted implicitly in Power BI. If you want to show the data as how it is excel you can try to create index column in Power Query Editor and then sort the original column using index column.

@Arul Thanks for your quick response Artul. I did that but the problem i am facing is, when i have to export the table visual from power bi in csv format that index column in also coming in the csv and i dont want that. I tried to hide that column in the table visual but at the time of exporting the table from power bi that column is also getting export along with other data. And if i am removeing it the whole sorting is gone Is there any other way that i can do?

I'm a novice Power Automate user and I'm looking for some guidance on setting up a workflow that exports data from a feature layer in AGO to an excel file. Documentation on the elements in PA seem limited so hopefully someone can guide me. I'd like to set up a recurring export and so far I have a recurrence element and the "Get data from feature layer" element set up. After that I'm not sure where to continue to put the data into an excel doc. Any help is appreciated.

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The POWER function takes two arguments: number and power. Number should be a numeric value, provided as a hardcoded constant or as a cell reference. The power argument functions as the exponent, indicating the power to which number should be raised.

Refer below tables showing the gaps between excel, power BI and the JMP with the same set of raw data (JMP % mostly not comparable to Excel and power BI). I hv attached the raw JMP file as well. Could anyone advice how to make JMP yield % is comparable to excel and Power BI. I am using ver 17. tks

When you multiply a number by a power, you are really just multiplying that number by itself a number of times equal to the power. This means that, for example, 2 multiplied by a power of 3 is the same as 2 x 2 x 2. While basic arithmetic symbols are fairly easy to figure out in Microsoft Excel, using exponents may not be so obvious, but the program does give you two different methods for multiplying a number by a power.

Just when we thought nothing can beat power lunches and dinners I came across this new consumable called Power Salad. The otherday I ordered for a fruit salad after coming from gym. The fruit stall guy seems to be taking little longer than I expected, so I asked him to deliver it in my room. After sometime the boy kncoked on my door to deliver this,

My kids come home from school by noon (they are too young for full day school). Right after lunch they watch their favorite cartoon program, Team Umizoomi, in which few fictional characters go about solving problems in the Umi city using maths. Milli, one of the characters is an expert with patterns. She solves problems by identifying patterns and unleashing pattern power.Ā 

Microsoft PowerPivot for Excel 2010: Give Your Data Meaning introduces PowerPivot in Excel 2010 to power users and data analysts who want to give their data meaning by creating their own Business Intelligence models. And with Microsoft Excel 2010: Data Analysis and Business Modeling, you'll learn the best ways to use Office Excel 2010 for data analysis and business modeling. Award-winning professor and statistician Wayne Winston shares practical examples to help you transform data into bottom-line results. Web site includes practice files. The two books included in this kit are:9780735640580 Microsoft PowerPivot for Excel 2010 9780735643369 Microsoft Office Excel 2007: Data Analysis and Business Modeling, 3E 17dc91bb1f

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