2

I have a user hierarchy, and I would like to expand and drill down only if the user has children. If the member in the hierarchy does not have children, I would like to hide this member.

The following query gets all those who are on level 1 in the hiearchy, but I would like to show only those which have at least a child member.

  with member [Test] as '0'
SELECT
{ [Test] } ON COLUMNS, non empty
{ 
 ( 

  [Dim User].[UserHierarchy].[UserLevel1].AllMembers 

 )
}Dimension Properties MEMBER_CAPTION,
MEMBER_UNIQUE_NAME ON ROWS
FROM   [Activities]

How can I achieve this? The user hierarchy is a ragged one.

2 Answers 2

3
WITH 
    MEMBER [Measures].[Test] AS
        0
SELECT
    { 
         [Test]
    } ON 0, 
    NON EMPTY { 
        FILTER (
             [Dim User].[UserHierarchy].[UserLevel1].AllMembers
            ,[Dim User].[UserHierarchy].CurrentMember.Children.Count > 0
        )
    } ON 1
FROM   [Activities]
1
  • Thanks for your answer Bill. If I wanted to display the hierarchy, from Level1 to Level8 for example, how would I mould your answer into showing me the full hierarchy of parents? Would your answer, hide only the members from the hierarchy, yet their figures still show in the measures?
    – Mez
    Aug 6, 2013 at 7:22
0

For others who have the same problem, and are after the excel kind of effect, where the dimension of the user hierarchy is only expanded for parents, this is the way to do it:

WITH 
    MEMBER [Measures].[Test] AS
        0
SELECT
    { 
         [Test]
    } ON 0, 
    NON EMPTY { 
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel1].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel2].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel3].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel4].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel5].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel6].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel7].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel8].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel9].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        ),
        filter (
            {[dim user].[userhierarchy].[userlevel10].allmembers  }
            ,[dim user].[userhierarchy].currentmember.children.count > 1
        )
    } ON 1
FROM   [Activities]

The query will automatically check the user hierarchy, and go down to the necessary levels automatically. Thanks to Bill for suggesting his solution and putting me on the right track.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.