First of all, I already read What can I do when getting “We are no longer accepting questions/answers from this account”?
Then you should already understand that we can't do anything about the automated, algorithmically-triggered question ban. We aren't going to upvote questions that don't actually merit upvotes, and drawing more attention from the Meta community to questions that aren't good is often a bad idea.
PowerBi: How to put pivoted columns together with non Pivoted?
When I read this, I can't tell the following things that are the most important about your question:
What exactly is the input that you use in order to demonstrate the problem? I see an image, but I don't know whether this represents the input, or the wrong output that you are getting.
What result should you get? Ideally this would either be text that you should see in the terminal, or a representation of the desired output in the source code of the language you're using; but I understand that PowerBI generally gives graphical results so an image mockup would be fine.
Please keep in mind that the necessary information to reproduce problems must be in the question itself, not behind an external link to GitHub. When "curators" (not an official title, but people who use their site privileges primarily to check question quality and clean up bad questions) look at your question, generally they will only check these links to make sure that they are not spam or otherwise objectionable.
Finally - and this applies to some of your other questions, which I see have already been edited to fix the problem: as network-wide policy, do not put "tags" in the title of your question. There is a tagging system for a reason. Writing "PowerBi: " in the title of a question that is already tagged [powerbi]
is noise. The edit changes this to flow naturally, which is also in accordance with network policy.
While searching for a solution to this question, I posted my findings on LinkedIn. The evaluation of LinkedIn community differs slightly from that of Stackoverflow.
Bluntly: we don't care, and there is no rational reason why we should care. Other communities evaluate questions by other standards because they have other motivating factors and other goals. Our goal is to build a reference library that offers high-quality answers. High-quality answers require high-quality questions, and a reference library exists to be searched by the general public, not simply to be useful to the people collaborating to build it.
PowerQuery: CSV import: Remove TOP junk rows
This does not adequately specify a problem. What is a "junk row"? How do I know, when I look at a row, whether it is "junk" or not? In the answer that you posted, what logic does it use to make that decision? "(tags, timestamps, errors, warnings...)" doesn't adequately describe the junk rows; it only categorizes them. Aside from that, I have no idea what phenomenon you're talking about; I have seen a great many CSV files, and they only ever have at most one row that isn't part of the data: a header row intended to give names to the columns.
Since a CSV file is fundamentally plain text, you can fix the problem by showing an example in the question. Use code formatting and provide a small example CSV that corresponds to the screen captures that you included with the answer, and clearly explain how you know that those rows are "junk". In the answer, clearly explain the mechanism by which the code determines that the rows are "junk".
Aside from that, since your question is about using Power Query from within PowerBI, it is not actually about Excel (even if Microsoft calls the specific product ("self-service business intelligence for Excel") - solving the problem doesn't involve using the Excel product, it just involves using Power Query for an ordinary spreadsheet (which is not at all an Excel-specific concept; many programs can use CSV files). So I removed that tag for you.
Comment: I know, some people don't appreciate, when I post answer together with question, but it's completely according Stack Overflow policy
Full credit to you. You are correct, and "some people" are wrong and misguided.
However: when you self answer, your answer is subject to the same quality standards as anywhere else. In particular:
When you post someone else's code that solves a problem, do not simply credit another author and link an off-site explanation of how the code works. It is correct to cite and credit others' work, but you are also expected to either cite and quote their explanation as well, or else give your own explanation in your own words.
Linking a video is especially poor sourcing. We want code in text in the answer itself, and an explanation in text in the answer itself. Especially if the code is "a bit adjusted", you should be qualified to explain that code yourself.
Do not give a vaguely-labelled "download" link for the code (or whatever else) to your own GitHub repository. Again, we want questions and answers to be self-contained, and only use links for reference, citation, corroboration etc. Especially don't link a zip file; that's sketchy. Linking stuff from your own GitHub repository also risks coming across as self-promoting.
Moving on to the next question on your list:
Powerquery: how to iterate/loop parameters list?
Your improvements to the question a few days later were good, but this is still not clear. You show what appears to be a single let
statement. What should be "iterated", and what should happen each time through the loop?
But aside from that, keep in mind generally that people who initially react to a question aren't necessarily going to come back to it - especially not days later. The best policy is to try as much as possible to take care of such issues ahead of time.
And, again, we can't rely on external links for your data. CSV is textual and describes a spreadsheet; instead of linking to a xlsx file, please show a CSV that allows us to demonstrate the problem and verify possible answers, in the question itself.
Find the count of words in string
Questions should be about one thing. While the relationship between "counting spaces" and "counting words" is clear enough, you should not present this as a separate question. You especially should not offer a numbered list of "sub-questions".
If someone suggests that you count the spaces, you could instead edit the question to say something like "I know that I can get the number of words as one more than the number of runs of consecutive spaces. But even if I knew how to count spaces in the string, that wouldn't guarantee that there is only one space between each word." That is to say: demonstrate the problem-solving logic that you have already understood, in order to relate that approach to the problem. (And if you don't understand why counting the spaces is related to counting the words, then it isn't helping you - therefore, don't edit the question, but continue using the comments - or a chat room - to understand the proposal.)
That said: people who give "hints" like that in answers are really trying to imply that the question doesn't help to add to our reference library. (Sometimes they are wrong; there is no limit on how "easy" a question can be, but you are expected to apply logical reasoning first.) The underlying motivation could be "if counting the number of spaces adequately solves the problem, then maybe you aren't actually interested in the number of words, because you don't care about consecutive runs of spaces". Or it could be "if counting consecutive runs of spaces solves the problem, then we already have a Q&A for that, and I can close the question as a duplicate". Etc. But it can also be completely off the mark (people who incorrectly think that we don't want "easy" questions).
If you need to avoid counting "special" characters, then your question is considerably more complex than it appears on first read. First off, there are still multiple interpretations of that logic: if the comma in Please , don't count this comma
is not a "separate word", then we must also consider whether oh,no
is one word that has a comma in it, one word ohno
without the comma (although if we are only counting the words then that doesn't matter), or two words that are separated by the comma. Plus, we need to define "special". Does that mean only commas? Only punctuation (is don't
really two words?) Everything that isn't a letter? Some other definition?
As for "can I do it without X tool", that shouldn't be called out separately. If you only get answers that use the tool you don't have available, you can place a bounty later to look for answers that don't use it. Or you can ask a separate question that is specifically about how to avoid or emulate that tool. Normally, I would consider "how to do X in SQL without Y" to be a duplicate of "how to do X in SQL" - i.e., the answers that don't use Y should go on the same question. But "how to simulate Y in SQL when it isn't available" is a perfectly valid separate question. If you can write code that gets the effect of string_split
, and you can use the results of string_split
to solve the problem, then you can solve the problem.
code
formatting is for code, not emphasis, names of technologies, etc.