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I have a table that has values for quarters and I need to add a new column that gives me the last not null value as last quarter. For example

ID | Project  | Q1   | Q2   | Q3   | Q4   | Current Quarter Value  
1  | bal bal  | 23   | 32   | 34   | null | 34  
2  | cuz cuz  | 43   | 56   | null | null | 56  

5 Answers 5

27

There are a couple formulas you can use when adding a custom column to the table (accessible from the Transform ribbon tab). Here's one:

if [Q4] <> null then [Q4] else if [Q3] <> null then [Q3] else if [Q2] <> null then [Q2] else [Q1]

If you don't want to write so many if statements, you can add the columns to a list and filter out the null values:

List.Last(List.Select({[Q1], [Q2], [Q3], [Q4]}, each _ <> null))

6
  • What does it fail on? What does your query look like? Could you copy the code shown in the Advanced Editor for the query? Jul 20, 2015 at 18:49
  • ended up using the nested if solution... not practical, but it works, thanks!
    – dev_huesca
    Sep 24, 2015 at 14:58
  • 21
    I would use List.Last(List.RemoveNulls({[Q1], [Q2], [Q3], [Q4]}))
    – Mike Honey
    Dec 23, 2015 at 5:43
  • If I could give +10, I would. Thank you!
    – Jason
    Jul 25, 2018 at 15:41
  • @MikeHoney why List.Last ? Why last, not first. Shouldn't it be [Q1] if its not empty? Or does not Last sellect Q4 if its not null? Dec 15, 2020 at 20:40
26

You can try the null coalescing operator (??). Both of the following lines achieve the same effect of returning ValueA unless it is null, in which case ValueB is returned.

if ValueA <> null then ValueA else ValueB
ValueA ?? ValueB

Applied to your specific case the necessary code would be:

[Q4] ?? [Q3] ?? [Q2] ?? [Q1]

Note that the null coalescing operator is a new addition to Power Query. It has not been officially documented yet and may not be available in all environments.

Information taken from this blog post.

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  • Wow this is a far more elegant solution for most situations! +1 May 18, 2022 at 8:02
  • This is really good! Sep 24, 2022 at 20:20
3

It's great how the Power Query M Language has developed over time. And luckily the null coalescing operator has been introduced. It's represented by ??

The easiest way to do a COALESCE is by using the last example. But you can use any of the following methods:

= null ?? null ?? 1 ?? 2
= List.First( List.RemoveNulls( { null, null, 1, 2 } ) )
= List.First( List.RemoveFirstN( { null, null, 1, 2 }, each _ = null ) )
= List.RemoveFirstN( { null, null, 1, 2 }, each _ = null ){0}
= List.Select( { null, null, 1, 2 }, each _ <> null ){0}

More explanation on this you can find here: https://gorilla.bi/power-query/coalesce/

Cheers, Rick

0

I think is a little bit late, but I'm also looking for a better solution than: List.First( List.RemoveNulls( { list } ) )

or for a default value:

List.First( List.RemoveNulls( List.Combine { { list }, { defaultValue } } ) ) )

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Using List.RemoveNulls bothered me because it seems to do more work than necessary.

Here is a function that appears to avoid processing the whole list, beyond the first non-null item:

coalesce = each List.First(List.RemoveFirstN(_, each _ = null), null)

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