Power Query – Automation and Parameters: Difference between revisions

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'''Result:'''
'''Result:'''
Whenever the value in the Excel cell is changed (e.g. from `USD` to `EUR`), clicking **Refresh All** will automatically update the result.
Whenever the value in the Excel cell is changed (e.g. from `USD` to `EUR`), clicking **Refresh All** will automatically update the result.
== Using Parameters in M Code ==
'''Goal:''' Apply parameter logic manually in the formula bar or Advanced Editor.
'''Steps:'''
# Make sure the parameter `TargetCurrency` exists
# Click on the filtering step in the Applied Steps pane
# Go to the formula bar and ensure the logic looks like:
= Table.SelectRows(Source, each [Currency] = TargetCurrency)
This will dynamically filter based on the parameter value.


== Parameter for File Path ==
== Parameter for File Path ==

Revision as of 12:03, 22 June 2025

Module 4: Automation and Parameters

Objective

Use parameters to automate queries and build dynamic, reusable data loading processes in Power Query.

Files Used

Creating a Parameter

Goal: Create a user-defined value that can be reused throughout queries.

Steps:

  1. Open Power Query Editor
  2. In the ribbon → go to the Home tab → click Manage Parameters → select New Parameter
  3. In the New Parameter dialog:
    • Name: `TargetCurrency`
    • Description: (optional)
    • Required: Checked
    • Type: Text
    • Suggested Values: Any value
    • Current Value: `EUR` (or any other currency from the dataset)
  4. Click OK

Using a Parameter in Filtering

Goal: Allow the user to control the filtered currency by typing a value directly in an Excel cell.

Steps:

  1. In Excel:
    • Type a value like `USD` in cell `A2`
    • In cell `A1`, enter the header name: `Currency`
    • Select cells `A1:A2` and press Ctrl+T to create a table
    • Name the table (e.g. `ParameterTable`) via the Table Design tab
  2. Go to the Data tab → click Get DataFrom Table/Range
  3. In Power Query Editor:
    • Ensure the table has one column (e.g. `Currency`) and one row (e.g. `USD`)
    • Right-click on the `USD` value → select Drill Down
  4. This will create a query returning just the single value
  5. Click Home → Close & Load To... → choose Only Create Connection
  6. Rename the query to: `CurrencyParameter`
  1. Next, load the main dataset (e.g. ExchangeRates.xlsx)
  2. In Power Query Editor:
    • Select the `Currency` column
    • Click the filter icon → select a sample value like `USD`
    • In the formula bar, replace the hardcoded value with your parameter query

Example: Replace:

= Table.SelectRows(Source, each [Currency] = "USD")


With:

= Table.SelectRows(Source, each [Currency] = CurrencyParameter)
  1. Click Close & Load to return the filtered data to Excel

Result: Whenever the value in the Excel cell is changed (e.g. from `USD` to `EUR`), clicking **Refresh All** will automatically update the result.

Parameter for File Path

Scenario: Allow the user to select the file path dynamically instead of hardcoding it.

Steps:

  1. In Power Query Editor → go to Home tab → click Manage Parameters → select New Parameter
  2. In the New Parameter dialog:
    • Name: `FilePath`
    • Type: Text
    • Current Value: Paste the full path to an Excel file (e.g. C:\\Data\\Sales_Q1.xlsx)
  3. Click OK
  4. Then, to load the file using this path:
  5. Go to Home tab → click New Source → choose Excel Workbook
  6. When prompted for the file path:
    • Instead of browsing, paste the value from the `FilePath` parameter directly
  7. OR: go to Advanced Editor and replace the hardcoded path:
= Excel.Workbook(File.Contents(FilePath), null, true)

Automating Folder Imports

Goal: Use folder-based queries to dynamically import and combine files.

Steps:

  1. In Excel → go to the Data tab → click Get DataFrom FileFrom Folder
  2. In the folder selection dialog → paste or browse to a folder with multiple Excel/CSV files
  3. Click OK and then Transform Data
  4. In Power Query Editor → you’ll see a table with metadata for each file
  5. Click the button in the Content column → select Combine → choose Combine & Transform Data
  6. Power Query creates a function and imports a sample file structure

Optional: Use parameter for folder path

  1. Create a parameter named `FolderPath` (type: Text)
  2. In the source step → click the gear icon on Source in the Applied Steps
  3. Replace the folder path with `FolderPath`
  4. OR go to Advanced Editor and replace:
= Folder.Files(FolderPath)

Additional Exercise: Parameterized Currency Filter

Goal: Build a flexible report showing exchange rates for one selected currency.

Steps:

  1. Load ExchangeRates.xlsx into Power Query
  2. Go to HomeManage ParametersNew Parameter
    • Name: `TargetCurrency`
    • Type: Text
    • Current Value: e.g. `USD`
  3. Apply a filter to the `Currency` column using this parameter:
    • Select `Currency` → HomeKeep RowsKeep Rows Where...
    • Condition: equals parameter `TargetCurrency`
  4. Load the result:
    • Go to HomeClose & Load To... → select output destination (table, worksheet, etc.)

Extension: Combine Parameters and Folder Query

Goal: Allow user to control which folder is imported dynamically.

Steps:

  1. Create a parameter named `FolderPath` (type: Text)
  2. Set its value to the full folder location where your files are stored
  3. In Power Query:
    • Go to Data tab → Get DataFrom FileFrom Folder
    • In the folder path dialog → paste the value from `FolderPath`
  4. OR in Advanced Editor, replace the path with:
= Folder.Files(FolderPath)
  1. Power Query will combine the files
  2. Load the final result to Excel via Close & Load

→ Continue to Module 5: Power Pivot Overview

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