Forum Discussion
Looking for Help to indentify duplicates which respect to conditions
- Mar 31, 2022
surya300810 Perhaps Power Query can do what you need. See attached file. Note that I changed some of the data as I believe it didn't coincide with the description/explanation in one of the screenshots you uploaded. I marked the changes yellow in the Input list.
surya300810 Not sure I follow. If C22 should indeed be a D, then it will no longer be included in the PQ generated table. Change it yourself and press Refresh All on the Data ribbon and see that item 87665 will only show E and Type 1. Isn't that what you want?
- Riny_van_EekelenApr 02, 2022Platinum Contributor
surya300810 In my example I named the range A3:C27 as "Input" and the query is connecting to that named range. You need to first define a name for your range (or create a table from it) and then change the Source step in the query so that it connects to that range or table.