One of those is : TimeDim
It's awesome.
In short : it completes a list of dates.
So, if you have data for 2012/01/01, 2012/01/05, 2012/01/06 -- it completes the list by adding 2012/01/02, 2012/01/03 and 2012/01/04
This is a VERY useful function indeed.
In the screenshot above, the left table does not have timedim on it.. the right one, the function is : =timedim([Invoice Date])
Oh.. by the way.. the help on this function DOESN'T WORK. So, you have to figure it out for yourself :)
Cool huh.
And it gets better.
The left table in the above picture, is what our database returns. But I want to show the table to the right.
Again, The TimeDim function can help.
In the above tables, I used the following functions :
=Year([Invoice Date])
="Q"+Quarter([Invoice Date])
In the right table, I used :
=Year(TimeDim([Invoice Date];YearPeriod))
and
="Q"+Quarter(TimeDim([Invoice Date];QuarterPeriod))
Cheers,
Peter
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