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Anonymous
Not applicable

Creating a join on 2 SQL Tables in the gallery

Hi,

 

I'm fairly new to PowerApps, getting to grips with it and liking it the more I learn. However I'm a bit stuck on a requirement I've been given and hope someone can help me out.

 

We have 2 tables in separate DB's in SQL. One table contains our customers profile (CustomerProfiles) and the other table contains our customers with all the roles of employees (RolesForCustomers) for each of these customers, such as Field Sales, BDM etc. The two tables share a field called PartyNumber that is the customers unique ID.

 

CustomerProfile (my main table)

- PartyNumber

- Customer Name

- Customer Address etc

 

RolesForCustomers (Secondary table)

- PartyNumber

- BDM

- Credit Controller etc

 

On the Browse Screen I would like to present the currently logged in user with a link to the CustomersProfile record, but I only want to display customers where the currently logged in user exists in one of the roles in RolesForCustomers.

 

So far I've come up with this for the BrowseGallery

 

SortByColumns(Filter(AddColumns('CustomersProfile]', "BDM", LookUp('RolesForCustomers', PartyNumber = PartyNumber, BDM)),User().FullName = "BDM"), "CustomerName", If(SortDescending1, Descending, Ascending))

 

However, in the options for the BrowseGallery, it's showing me the RolesForCustomers datasource instead of the CustomersProfile datasource. So clearly I've got something wrong here.

 

As I understand it, the AddColumns function allows me to add a "calculated" column to the named datasource, The Lookup is then looking at the RolesForCustomers table to match the PartyNumber ID from the two tables and bring back the BDM column. and then compare the value of the currently logged in user against the BDM column and return all rows where they match.

 

In time I'd like to increase this to be adding other columns as well (Credit Controller, Field Sales Rep etc), but for now, just getting it working with the one column would be a win for me.

 

I've followed this blog so far, but clearly I'm not translating it quite to my requirements.

http://www.crmviking.com/2017/02/using-related-entities-in-powerapps.html

 

Thanks in advance for any help you can provide.

20 REPLIES 20
Anonymous
Not applicable

@Meneghino, thanks again for your time on this.

 

I seem to be making some progress. However, when I try to disambiguate the PartyNumber column in the lookup I get a warning.

 

Suggestion: Part of this lookup formula cannot be evaluated remotely due to service limitations. The local evaluation may produce suboptimal or partial results. I f possible, please try to simplify the formula. For more information, please see the Lookup function documentation.

 

This message appears under the disambiguation which is as follows.

LookUp('[dbo].[MemberShipDashBoardSTATIC]','[dbo].[MemberShipDashBoardSTATIC]'[@Partynumber]=PartyNumber, BDM)

 

I'm getting some results back now but the BDM field doesn't contain any results when it should.

Hi @Anonymous 

I think it is some performance issue, as indicated alo by the blue dot warning.  Some caching would really simplify your life, IMHO.

Anonymous
Not applicable

OK @Meneghino,

 

I've cached the entriety of my two tables (not sure that's the right thing to do) and I'm still recieving an error

 

SortByColumns(Search(AddColumns('[dbo].[DIM_CustomerCRMCLONE]',"AccountBDM",LookUp('[dbo].[MemberShipDashBoardSTATIC]',RolesForCustomers.Partynumber in Profiles.PartyNumber, BDM)),TextSearchBox1.Text,"CustomerName"),"CustomerName",Ascending)

 

The error is Invalid argument type. Cannot use Table values in this context.

 

I also changed my "=" to an "in" and it gave me the error saying "Right side of "in" operator is not a column name.

 

Have I got confused about what a Lookup is capable of? I'm looking for this to do a SQL style join so that the columns in "RolesforCustomers" are appended to "Profiles" when their PartyNumbers are the same. I don't think the Lookup function is correct for this.

Hi @Anonymous

 

In order to do a join in PowerApps you need to add a column containing a table and then use the Ungroup function.

LookUp simply looks up a single record.  So what you should do is GroupBy the target table, do the LookUp and then Ungroup the result.  This way you don't even need the in operator.

Please see here: https://powerapps.microsoft.com/en-us/tutorials/function-groupby/

 

However, please be aware that GroupBy and Ungroup are not delegable functions (yet)

 

When you say you have cached the tables, then I assume you mean you loaded the tables as collections.

Then you should use these collections in your formulas and not the dbo tables.

 

I have lost a bit track of your table names and column names so it is difficult for me to give you a specific formula.  I will look back at your previous posts if you have not managed to get a working result.  Don't worry, we'll get there.

Anonymous
Not applicable

Yes @Meneghino, Sorry my Data Warehouse guy has asked me to use different tables.

 

I have created collections for my two tables as suggested, so I have the following Collections:

 

- Profiles (The information about my customers, this is primary table containing the data the users want to see and edit the PartyNumber column is an identifier)

- Responsibilities (This table contains the BDM and the PartyNumber FK)

- I also have my collection called BDM that contains the current user Fullname

 

I think, I'm getting really close now.

 

I added a second button to build a collection that does the following

 

ClearCollect(Joined, AddColumns(Profiles, "BDM", LookUp(Responsibilities, PartyNumber=Profiles[@PartyNumber], BDM)))

 

That allows me to see the Collection has joined my two tables successfully (woohoo).

 

So now to my filter.

 

This is my one remaining issue. For the purposes of testing, I've created a 3rd button with the following:

 

ClearCollect(FilteredProfiles, Filter(Joined, First(UserBDM.Value) in Joined.BDM))

 

So create a Collection called FilteredProfiles by filtering the "Joined" collection created in the second button based on the Current User matching the BDM value.

 

Unfortunately this is my error

 

"Invalid argument type. Expecting a Record value, but of a different schema. Column 'BDM of type Text is missing."

 

If I remove the First() function around the UserBDM.Value then I get a complaint about using a table instead of a record.

 

If I get this last bit sorted I think I'm there. Would it then be possible to combine all these collection creations under one button and they execute in order or will it complain if it perform functions on collections in the same event that they are being created (i.e. the button click)?

 

Thanks again for this. Slowly getting my head around this.

Anonymous
Not applicable

Argh!!!

 

Just found out about the 500 record limit in collections.

 

Not only does this mean my collections that should actually have thousands of records only return 500 records, but even if I were to filter direct on the SQL table, our BDM's can have over 500 customers so not sure how to architect this now!

 

Help please!

Hi @Anonymous

As mentioned (I think) in one of my previous replies, there are techniques for caching thousands of lines.  I have done this in a 3-4 seconds for 4,000 rows.  There is no limit to how many rows you can store in a collection, you just need to load them into the collection 500 rows at a time since that is the number that will be returned by any query.

 

I have a few posts where I mention the technique, but here is an example of what I use to cache up to 2,000 rows in 2-3 seconds:

 

ClearCollect(CachedInstruments, Sort('[dbo].[Instruments]', ID, Ascending));
UpdateContext({MaxID: Max(CachedInstruments, ID)});
If(CountRows(CachedInstruments)=500,
	Collect(CachedInstruments, Filter(Sort('[dbo].[Instruments]', ID, Ascending), ID > MaxID))
;
UpdateContext({MaxID: Max(CachedInstruments, ID)});
If(CountRows(CachedInstruments)=1000,
	Collect(CachedInstruments, Filter(Sort('[dbo].[Instruments]', ID, Ascending), ID > MaxID))
;
UpdateContext({MaxID: Max(CachedInstruments, ID)});
If(CountRows(CachedInstruments)=1500,
	Collect(CachedInstruments, Filter(Sort('[dbo].[Instruments]', ID, Ascending), ID > MaxID))
)))

 

Even if you have composite index in SQL Server (as you may for a many-to-many table), here is what I use for up to 2,500 rows:

 

ClearCollect(CachedEntitiesInstruments, SortByColumns('[dbo].[Entities_Instruments]', "Entity", Ascending, "Instrument", Ascending));
UpdateContext({MaxEntity: Max(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Entity), MaxInstrument: Max(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Instrument)});
If(CountRows(CachedEntitiesInstruments)=500,
	Collect(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Filter(SortByColumns('[dbo].[Entities_Instruments]', "Entity", Ascending, "Instrument", Ascending), (Entity = MaxEntity && Instrument > MaxInstrument) || Entity > MaxEntity))
;
UpdateContext({MaxEntity: Max(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Entity), MaxInstrument: Max(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Instrument)});
If(CountRows(CachedEntitiesInstruments)=1000,
	Collect(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Filter(SortByColumns('[dbo].[Entities_Instruments]', "Entity", Ascending, "Instrument", Ascending), (Entity = MaxEntity && Instrument > MaxInstrument) || Entity > MaxEntity))
;
UpdateContext({MaxEntity: Max(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Entity), MaxInstrument: Max(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Instrument)});
If(CountRows(CachedEntitiesInstruments)=1500,
	Collect(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Filter(SortByColumns('[dbo].[Entities_Instruments]', "Entity", Ascending, "Instrument", Ascending), (Entity = MaxEntity && Instrument > MaxInstrument) || Entity > MaxEntity))
;
UpdateContext({MaxEntity: Max(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Entity), MaxInstrument: Max(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Instrument)});
If(CountRows(CachedEntitiesInstruments)=2000,
	Collect(CachedEntitiesInstruments, Filter(SortByColumns('[dbo].[Entities_Instruments]', "Entity", Ascending, "Instrument", Ascending), (Entity = MaxEntity && Instrument > MaxInstrument) || Entity > MaxEntity))
))))

Please let me know if it is not clear how these work.

Hello guys!

Did you find any solution?

Anonymous
Not applicable

Creating collections and joining them as described above was the solution, however with the volume of data we were dealing with the process of "collecting" data into collections multiple times (up to 3000 rows), with the number of columns we had (around 100), this was very slow and was not a viable option for users who would be out and about with varying signal strength.

I think we will just have to wait for views to be available or for 'in' to be delegated.

Can't be long now, surely...

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