There’s a lot of detail, including examples (although the ConcatenateX() page isn’t live at the time of writing – but I’ve blogged about that already), so it’s well worth reading through.
My name is Chris Webb, and I work on the Fabric CAT team at Microsoft. I blog about Power BI, Power Query, SQL Server Analysis Services, Azure Analysis Services and Excel.
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4 thoughts on “Documentation For New Excel 2016 DAX Functions”
This is really exciting! Do you happen to know if these DAX functions will be available for SSAS Tabular anytime soon?
This is really exciting! Do you happen to know if these DAX functions will be available for SSAS Tabular anytime soon?
I guess they will appear in the next version of SSAS Tabular, whenever that is released.
Now getting a page not found message – any idea what happened/
No, no idea – I’ll see if I can find a new link…