Cascales. The quantitative difference between countable compact- ness and compactness. J. Math. Anal. Appl., 343(1):479-491, 2008.C. Angosto and B. Cascales, The quantitative difference between count- able compactness and compactness, J. Math. Anal. Appl. (2008), doi:10.1016/j.jmaa....
I then take that measure and divide by the original count to get the % Timely: %Timely = DIVIDE([Org minus Org], COUNTA('Time Eval'[Org])) So, the final measure is a quick measure called Difference from Filtered Value which should give me the percentage difference bet...
COUNTA(SharePoint[Name] ) ) "Sharepoint[Created]" is a date field and I have a relationship between that and a universal Dates table Here is my Cumulative total: Cumulative total = CALCULATE( COUNTA(SharePoint[Name]), FILTER( ALLSELECTED('SharePoint'), SharePoint[Created] <= max ...
i.e. it does not attain all the values within the limits of the variable. So, the number of permitted values that it can suppose is either finite or countably infinite. Hence if you are able to count the set of items, then the variable...
"Sharepoint[Created]" is a date field and I have a relationship between that and a universal Dates table Here is my Cumulative total: Cumulative total = CALCULATE( COUNTA(SharePoint[Name]), FILTER( ALLSELECTED('SharePoint'), SharePoint[Created] <= max (SharePoint[Created]) ) )...
"Sharepoint[Created]" is a date field and I have a relationship between that and a universal Dates table Here is my Cumulative total: Cumulative total = CALCULATE( COUNTA(SharePoint[Name]), FILTER( ALLSELECTED('SharePoint'), SharePoint[Created] <= max (SharePoint[Created]) ) ...