I have data formulas like this. How do you change SUM to Formula in summary. So Growth Calculate on Summary Level its wrong.
@adisulyadi Do mark the 'Accept reply as solution' to a reply if it resolved your query! It encourages community members in general and also helps future members who may have the same question but may skip over the thread assuming it has no solution
Regards,
Anirudh
Hi @adisulyadi
You can'y use summary as formula with PREVIOUS function in same line item.
Create one more line item and just refer to the line item which having previous function in your formula and for this line item you can set the summary as formula.
Hope this helps!
Thanks
Akhtar
You will not be able to set the summary method to Formula for the time dimension if using a time-based function like previous() If you try you will get an error like the one below:
However, depending on what you want to show you may be able to use the other summary methods to achieve this. For example if you wanted to show what the value was in month 12 of the prior year you could set the summary to Opening Balance ( month 1 of current year = month 12 of prior using Previous).
@adisulyadi
Break your formula into multiple line items and you should be able to get your results. Add Two line items Previous Premium and Previous GTV - Both should have SUM at Summary Level and then do the simple division in the Output line item and change the summary to Formula.
@Akhtar.shahbaz unfortunately it doesn't work that way - simple refer will still not have the right values at aggregated levels because technically there is no formula, it is just refer.
Hope this helps
Misbah
I have A6 as the parent list and two sibling lists: A6.5 and A7. The A7 list includes an attribute that maps to A6.5. In the UX, the user will select A6.5 using a content selector, and the grid (dimensioned by A7) should display only the A7 items associated with that selected A6.5. Since the selector is a page context and…
A quick reminder of the Bulk Copy functionality. Bulk Copy allows you copy large volumes of data from one slice of a model to another in a single, optimised operation, instead of using formulas or imports. Use case: copy a version (RF1) into a prior year version (PY RF1) using a versions list to allow for year-on-year…
We are looking for Anaplan end-users to provide feedback on their experiences with the Excel add-in. Interested individuals will respond to this 5-minute survey to help us understand personal needs and behavior when using the add-in. The feedback provided by survey takers is essential to the roadmap of Anaplan's products.…