Yes,
I am!
Problem is that the Scope doesn't seem to work correctly: it refers to the
dataset in stead of the matrix itself.
I have tried something like this:
=RunningValue(Abs(cInt(Fields!PlannedChecked.Value)),Sum,"matrix1_SubGroup")
I again refer to the fact that Fields!PlannedChecked.Value is a boolean
value and that he doesn't seem to summarize the values as in the control,
but in the dataset. He doesn't summarize correctly.
The runningValue function was inserted with an IIF -statement in combination
with the InScope-function to determine whether I'm actually in a
summarize-column.
A count would also do the job, but how to do that if I can't put a
limitation on the scope?
A dSum would do the trick, but that isn't supported.
I'm really stuck on this one, but as long as someone hasn't officially told
me how the RunningValue-function works exactly in a matrix-control, I keep
searching for a solution and reason.
Regards,
Ive
[quoted text, click to view] "Soan" <Soan@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:EF2FBEA3-C751-4C63-84C5-C319251D5F7C@microsoft.com...
> Are you giving a Scope????
>
> "Ive" wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I have a Matrix-control which has to "summarize" a lot of data in the
>> end,
>> based upon boolean values. (the column-grouping is a static group).
>>
>> Customer1
>> Test1 0 1 0 Value 1
>> Test 1.1 Value 2
>> Test 1.2 Value 3
>> Test 2 1 0 1 Value 4
>> Test 2.1 Value 5
>> Test 3 0 1 0 Value 6
>> ______________________________________
>> Totals: 1 2 1
>> Customer 2
>> Test 1 ...
>>
>> The values are bool-values AND not always displayed. I want to summarize
>> the values as they appear on the screen, not how they are in the dataset.
>> Because, now the runningValues-function always summarizes to much, which
>> is
>> also al the "invisible" data between the main groups. I have written
>> something to display 0 in the subgroups, but it doesn't change my result.
>>
>> Is it possible to do this and, if so, how?
>>
>> Thanks a lot for your answers!
>>
>> Ive
>>
>>
>>