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Sujimon
Frequent Visitor

Covert lookup result into a collection of 2 columns

Hi,

Is there a way to convert a Lookup result of single row record into a multi row collection with 2 columns, col1 with column names of Lookup record and col2 with field item..the number of columns in the Lookup will change over time so it needs to be dynamic. This will be simlar to transpose in excel.

Thanks

Suji

2 ACCEPTED SOLUTIONS

Accepted Solutions
poweractivate
Most Valuable Professional
Most Valuable Professional

 

Clear(Target_Collection);
ForAll(

    // create table of records in JSON format and substitute out the unneeded Chars
    Split(
        Substitute(
            Substitute(
                Substitute(
                    Substitute(
                        Substitute(
                            JSON(
                                Orig_Collection,
                                JSONFormat.IgnoreBinaryData
                            ),
                            "[",
                            ""
                        ),
                        "{",
                        ""
                    ),
                    "}",
                    ""
                ),
                "]",
                ""
            ),
            Char(34),
            ""
        ),
        ","
    ),
    
    // Transpose data
    Collect(
        Target_Collection,
        {
            Question: Left(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) - 1
            ),
            Response: Mid(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) + 1
            )
        }
    )
)

 

 

from Transpose Data Collection 

 

So how it works is:

 

    Split(
        Substitute(
            Substitute(
                Substitute(
                    Substitute(
                        Substitute(
                            JSON(
                                Orig_Collection,
                                JSONFormat.IgnoreBinaryData
                            ),
                            "[",
                            ""
                        ),
                        "{",
                        ""
                    ),
                    "}",
                    ""
                ),
                "]",
                ""
            ),
            Char(34),
            ""
        ),
        ","
    )

 

 

 

This part above is a trick to cause the ForAll to be able to iterate over a Table.

Basically it turns it into a JSON, then it removes characters, then it splits by a delimiter Char(34) which is quotation mark I believe.

If you want to inspect it, just take the above part and put it into a Gallery separately for example, then hover over the formula bar and see what's inside it.

 

And now

 

// Transpose data
    Collect(
        Target_Collection,
        {
            Question: Left(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) - 1
            ),
            Response: Mid(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) + 1
            )
        }
    )

 

 

This part above is the one you may need to customize to your specific Record and data structure.

 

That art of the formula is the other argument of ForAll, which means, that it essentially takes the stuff from the Table mentioned above, iterates over it, and puts it in a Collection Target_Collection .

This is where you need to adjust it.

For example, to change Question and Response to the names of your 2 columns respectively.

 

I did not test any of the formulas, so I would need to test it to tell you any more than the generics above.

 

For now, I do not know the following:

1. I don't know if it works for more than 2 columns. You could try this

 

// pseudocode - may not work
    Collect(
        Target_Collection,
        {
            Question: Left(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) - 1
            ),
            Response: Mid(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) + 1
            ),
            Column3: Mid(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) + 2
            )
        }
    )

 

But the above may or may not work and is an untested guess. If it does work, I guess you're lucky. If it does not work, I either gave the wrong formula, which is probably the case (and in that event, you may need to figure it out yourself), or the top part with the Substitute needs to be changed too, and for that, I would need to investigate the formula over more time. Right now, I don't think I have enough time to investigate this formula with that level of detail that might be needed to give you a complete solution for your requirement to have multiple columns (so in that event, you may need to figure it out as well).

 

What I recommend for now is that if the solution works for you for two columns, and you can just change the names of the columns Question and Response, you could go with that for now if it works "perfectly" for you, since it seems like you were happy with it so far. 

 

In case the person who gave that original formula might be around, I'll mention @Anonymous here in case they would like to offer more details in case you want more columns.

 

I also would welcome someone else who wants to check on this with more detail, to reply further with more details on multiple columns, or maybe to even walk through each part of the formula for you in more detail than I did. For example I might be interested what @RandyHayes thinks about this particular scenario, if they have the time to check on it, and is interested to check on it.

 

See if it helps @Sujimon 

 

 

View solution in original post

RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@poweractivate 

Well....you were curious of my response 😂😉

 

I would say your approach is very programmatic!  If PowerApps was more code development I would say that fits the bill.  BUT, PowerApps does work in a much different way and most things you want to do are very quick and easy.

 

The major issue to start was that the ForAll is used like a For Loop.  It is a function that creates a table of records.  Although it can be "forced" to act like a for loop to some degree, it is best (especially in terms of performance) to use it as designed.

 

SO...your entire formula in a more PowerApp'ian way would be this:

ClearCollect(Target_Collection,
    ForAll(
        MatchAll(JSON(Orig_Collectionm IgnoreBinaryData), """(?<nvalue>[^""]+)"": *""?(?<jvalue>[^(""|\n)]+)""?").SubMatches,
        {Question:First(SubMatches).Value, Response:Last(SubMatches).Value}
    )
)

 

This produces the same results with much less formula writing!  And...it uses the ForAll as a table creating function that it is.

 

To explain - at the inner core, the collection is converted to JSON.  That is "fed" to the MatchAll function that returns a table based on the RegularExpression matching provided.

The table from the MatchAll is fed to the ForAll where it is used to iterate over the table rows and then produce records with a Question and Response column using the associated values from the matched row of the source table.

And...ForAll returns a table, that is then fed to ClearCollect where it is duplicated into a collection.

 

Normally I would advise against the collection in general as it is not needed in this case, but since the sample was based on it...

 

As for the original question by @Sujimon 

The problem with this approach is that you will not get away from altering your App if your columns change.  In other words, nothing you have so far will allow for "dynamic".

That is because PowerApps needs to know the schema of your source when it is designed.  It "locks" that in from that point forward until you refresh the source in your app designer.

 

So, while the above will give you what you want with one record schema, it will not dynamically change as the source changes.

 

Hopefully this is helpful for all.

 

 

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!

View solution in original post

7 REPLIES 7
poweractivate
Most Valuable Professional
Most Valuable Professional

Sujimon
Frequent Visitor

Hi,

The first link worked perfectly for me but I would like to understand how it works. The code is too comples for me.

Thanks

Suji

poweractivate
Most Valuable Professional
Most Valuable Professional

 

Clear(Target_Collection);
ForAll(

    // create table of records in JSON format and substitute out the unneeded Chars
    Split(
        Substitute(
            Substitute(
                Substitute(
                    Substitute(
                        Substitute(
                            JSON(
                                Orig_Collection,
                                JSONFormat.IgnoreBinaryData
                            ),
                            "[",
                            ""
                        ),
                        "{",
                        ""
                    ),
                    "}",
                    ""
                ),
                "]",
                ""
            ),
            Char(34),
            ""
        ),
        ","
    ),
    
    // Transpose data
    Collect(
        Target_Collection,
        {
            Question: Left(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) - 1
            ),
            Response: Mid(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) + 1
            )
        }
    )
)

 

 

from Transpose Data Collection 

 

So how it works is:

 

    Split(
        Substitute(
            Substitute(
                Substitute(
                    Substitute(
                        Substitute(
                            JSON(
                                Orig_Collection,
                                JSONFormat.IgnoreBinaryData
                            ),
                            "[",
                            ""
                        ),
                        "{",
                        ""
                    ),
                    "}",
                    ""
                ),
                "]",
                ""
            ),
            Char(34),
            ""
        ),
        ","
    )

 

 

 

This part above is a trick to cause the ForAll to be able to iterate over a Table.

Basically it turns it into a JSON, then it removes characters, then it splits by a delimiter Char(34) which is quotation mark I believe.

If you want to inspect it, just take the above part and put it into a Gallery separately for example, then hover over the formula bar and see what's inside it.

 

And now

 

// Transpose data
    Collect(
        Target_Collection,
        {
            Question: Left(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) - 1
            ),
            Response: Mid(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) + 1
            )
        }
    )

 

 

This part above is the one you may need to customize to your specific Record and data structure.

 

That art of the formula is the other argument of ForAll, which means, that it essentially takes the stuff from the Table mentioned above, iterates over it, and puts it in a Collection Target_Collection .

This is where you need to adjust it.

For example, to change Question and Response to the names of your 2 columns respectively.

 

I did not test any of the formulas, so I would need to test it to tell you any more than the generics above.

 

For now, I do not know the following:

1. I don't know if it works for more than 2 columns. You could try this

 

// pseudocode - may not work
    Collect(
        Target_Collection,
        {
            Question: Left(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) - 1
            ),
            Response: Mid(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) + 1
            ),
            Column3: Mid(
                ThisRecord.Result,
                Find(
                    ":",
                    ThisRecord.Result
                ) + 2
            )
        }
    )

 

But the above may or may not work and is an untested guess. If it does work, I guess you're lucky. If it does not work, I either gave the wrong formula, which is probably the case (and in that event, you may need to figure it out yourself), or the top part with the Substitute needs to be changed too, and for that, I would need to investigate the formula over more time. Right now, I don't think I have enough time to investigate this formula with that level of detail that might be needed to give you a complete solution for your requirement to have multiple columns (so in that event, you may need to figure it out as well).

 

What I recommend for now is that if the solution works for you for two columns, and you can just change the names of the columns Question and Response, you could go with that for now if it works "perfectly" for you, since it seems like you were happy with it so far. 

 

In case the person who gave that original formula might be around, I'll mention @Anonymous here in case they would like to offer more details in case you want more columns.

 

I also would welcome someone else who wants to check on this with more detail, to reply further with more details on multiple columns, or maybe to even walk through each part of the formula for you in more detail than I did. For example I might be interested what @RandyHayes thinks about this particular scenario, if they have the time to check on it, and is interested to check on it.

 

See if it helps @Sujimon 

 

 

RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@poweractivate 

Well....you were curious of my response 😂😉

 

I would say your approach is very programmatic!  If PowerApps was more code development I would say that fits the bill.  BUT, PowerApps does work in a much different way and most things you want to do are very quick and easy.

 

The major issue to start was that the ForAll is used like a For Loop.  It is a function that creates a table of records.  Although it can be "forced" to act like a for loop to some degree, it is best (especially in terms of performance) to use it as designed.

 

SO...your entire formula in a more PowerApp'ian way would be this:

ClearCollect(Target_Collection,
    ForAll(
        MatchAll(JSON(Orig_Collectionm IgnoreBinaryData), """(?<nvalue>[^""]+)"": *""?(?<jvalue>[^(""|\n)]+)""?").SubMatches,
        {Question:First(SubMatches).Value, Response:Last(SubMatches).Value}
    )
)

 

This produces the same results with much less formula writing!  And...it uses the ForAll as a table creating function that it is.

 

To explain - at the inner core, the collection is converted to JSON.  That is "fed" to the MatchAll function that returns a table based on the RegularExpression matching provided.

The table from the MatchAll is fed to the ForAll where it is used to iterate over the table rows and then produce records with a Question and Response column using the associated values from the matched row of the source table.

And...ForAll returns a table, that is then fed to ClearCollect where it is duplicated into a collection.

 

Normally I would advise against the collection in general as it is not needed in this case, but since the sample was based on it...

 

As for the original question by @Sujimon 

The problem with this approach is that you will not get away from altering your App if your columns change.  In other words, nothing you have so far will allow for "dynamic".

That is because PowerApps needs to know the schema of your source when it is designed.  It "locks" that in from that point forward until you refresh the source in your app designer.

 

So, while the above will give you what you want with one record schema, it will not dynamically change as the source changes.

 

Hopefully this is helpful for all.

 

 

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!
RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@Sujimon 

Additional note...keep in mind that last part that I mentioned about how PowerApps must know the specific of the datasource and schemas at design time.  

This is why it cannot allow reference to data sources by name - as you asked in your other post.

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!
poweractivate
Most Valuable Professional
Most Valuable Professional

 

@RandyHayes 

 

I checked your response and I found the approach much better.

I just found the formula in another thread actually, and then I was curious how you would approach it, and actually I like your approach much better for this scenario. Thank you for taking the time to share it! 🙂

 

 

RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@poweractivate 

Yeah...way too much "programming" type approaches out there.  That's not PowerApps!  It's much simpler if you go the "PowerApps way"!

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!

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Stay tuned for more updates, inspiring stories, and collaborative opportunities from and for our Community User Groups.   P.S. Have an event or success story to share? Reach out to us – we’d love to feature you. Just leave a comment or send a PM here in the Community!

Exclusive LIVE Community Event: Power Apps Copilot Coffee Chat with Copilot Studio Product Team

We have closed kudos on this post at this time. Thank you to everyone who kudo'ed their RSVP--your invitations are coming soon!  Miss the window to RSVP? Don't worry--you can catch the recording of the meeting this week in the Community.  Details coming soon!   *****   It's time for the SECOND Power Apps Copilot Coffee Chat featuring the Copilot Studio product team, which will be held LIVE on April 3, 2024 at 9:30 AM Pacific Daylight Time (PDT).     This is an incredible opportunity to connect with members of the Copilot Studio product team and ask them anything about Copilot Studio. We'll share our special guests with you shortly--but we want to encourage to mark your calendars now because you will not want to miss the conversation.   This live event will give you the unique opportunity to learn more about Copilot Studio plans, where we’ll focus, and get insight into upcoming features. We’re looking forward to hearing from the community, so bring your questions!   TO GET ACCESS TO THIS EXCLUSIVE AMA: Kudo this post to reserve your spot! Reserve your spot now by kudoing this post.  Reservations will be prioritized on when your kudo for the post comes through, so don't wait! Click that "kudo button" today.   Invitations will be sent on April 2nd.Users posting Kudos after April 2nd. at 9AM PDT may not receive an invitation but will be able to view the session online after conclusion of the event. Give your "kudo" today and mark your calendars for April 3rd, 2024 at 9:30 AM PDT and join us for an engaging and informative session!

Tuesday Tip: Blogging in the Community is a Great Way to Start

TUESDAY TIPS are our way of communicating helpful things we've learned or shared that have helped members of the Community. Whether you're just getting started or you're a seasoned pro, Tuesday Tips will help you know where to go, what to look for, and navigate your way through the ever-growing--and ever-changing--world of the Power Platform Community! We cover basics about the Community, provide a few "insider tips" to make your experience even better, and share best practices gleaned from our most active community members and Super Users.   With so many new Community members joining us each week, we'll also review a few of our "best practices" so you know just "how" the Community works, so make sure to watch the News & Announcements each week for the latest and greatest Tuesday Tips!   This Week's Topic: Blogging in the Community Are you new to our Communities and feel like you may know a few things to share, but you're not quite ready to start answering questions in the forums? A great place to start is the Community blog! Whether you've been using Power Platform for awhile, or you're new to the low-code revolution, the Community blog is a place for anyone who can write, has some great insight to share, and is willing to commit to posting regularly! In other words, we want YOU to join the Community blog.    Why should you consider becoming a blog author? Here are just a few great reasons. 🎉   Learn from Each Other: Our community is like a bustling marketplace of ideas. By sharing your experiences and insights, you contribute to a dynamic ecosystem where makers learn from one another. Your unique perspective matters! Collaborate and Innovate: Imagine a virtual brainstorming session where minds collide, ideas spark, and solutions emerge. That’s what our community blog offers—a platform for collaboration and innovation. Together, we can build something extraordinary. Showcase the Power of Low-Code: You know that feeling when you discover a hidden gem? By writing about your experience with your favorite Power Platform tool, you’re shining a spotlight on its capabilities and real-world applications. It’s like saying, “Hey world, check out this amazing tool!” Earn Trust and Credibility: When you share valuable information, you become a trusted resource. Your fellow community members rely on your tips, tricks, and know-how. It’s like being the go-to friend who always has the best recommendations. Empower Others: By contributing to our community blog, you empower others to level up their skills. Whether it’s a nifty workaround, a time-saving hack, or an aha moment, your words have impact. So grab your keyboard, brew your favorite beverage, and start writing! Your insights matter and your voice counts! With every blog shared in the Community, we all do a better job of tackling complex challenges with gusto. 🚀   Welcome aboard, future blog author! ✍️✏️🌠 Get started blogging across the Power Platform Communities today! Just follow one of the links below to begin your blogging adventure.   Power Apps: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Power-Apps-Community-Blog/bg-p/PowerAppsBlog Power Automate: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Power-Automate-Community-Blog/bg-p/MPABlog Copilot Studio: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Copilot-Studio-Community-Blog/bg-p/PVACommunityBlog Power Pages: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Power-Pages-Community-Blog/bg-p/mpp_blog   When you follow the link, look for the Message Admins button like this on the page's right rail, and let us know you're interested. We can't wait to connect with you and help you get started. Thanks for being part of our incredible community--and thanks for becoming part of the community blog!

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