Power BI Icon Names for Conditional Formatting Using DAX

Power BI icon names for conditional formatting using DAX

I have previously written about conditional formatting in Power BI, and how you can take one step further with using DAX to dynamically change the conditional formatting. Conditional formatting with DAX for colors is easy, you can use the color name or their hex code. But for Icons, it is slightly different. You can either use SVG code to get whatever icon you want or use the Icon name for a set of known icons in Power BI. In this article and video, I show you how to use Icon names for dynamic conditional formating using DAX in Power BI.

Video

Credit to: Francisco Mullor Cabrera

The main credit for this blog article goes to Francisco Mullor Cabrera because of his amazing list of Icon names he populated and listed in his article, Which is in Spanish here. I strongly recommend checking it out and connecting with him through his LinkedIn page. So special thanks to Francisco, let’s see how this works.

Prerequisite

I would highly recommend reading the articles below to first understand how conditional formatting in Power BI works and how it works with DAX;

DAX Conditional Formatting and Colors

If you want to have color conditional formatting using DAX in Power BI, here is an example of such expression:

Gauge Color = 
 SWITCH(
     TRUE(),
     [Sales]>7000000,"Green",
     [Sales]>4000000,"Orange",
     "Red"
 )

If the expression above is used in a visual’s conditional format for color, It ends up with colors as below;

To learn more about it, read my article here.

For colors, you can either use the name of the color inside a text, such as “Green”, or you can use their hex code, such as “4fab20”. For Icons, you can use either SVG or Icon names.

Icon Names

The name of default Icons in Power BI (as kindly mentioned originally by Francisco here) is as below;

SignLow
 SignMedium
 CircleHigh
 CircleMedium
 CircleLow
 4CircleLow
 CircleMedium1
 4CircleMedium2
 CircleEmpty
 Circle25
 CircleHalf
 Circle75
 CircleFilled
 TrafficLow
 TrafficMedium
 TrafficHigh
 TrafficBlackRimmed
 TrafficLowLight
 TrafficMediumLight
 TrafficHighLight
 TrafficBlackRimmedLight
 ColoredArrowDownRight
 ColoredArrowRight
 ColoredArrowUpRight
 ColoredArrowUp
 GreyArrowDown
 GreyArrowDownRight
 GreyArrowRight
 GreyArrowUpRight
 GreyArrowUp
 FlagLow
 FlagMedium
 FlagHigh
 FlagBlack
 SymbolLow
 SymbolMedium
 SymbolHigh
 CircleSymbolLow
 CircleSymbolMedium
 CircleSymbolHigh
 StarLow
 StarMedium
 StarHigh
 StarMediumLight
 StarHighLight
 TriangleLow
 TriangleMedium
 TriangleHigh
 SignalBarEmpty
 SignalBarLow
 SignalBarMedium
 SignalBarMedium2
 SignalBarFull
 SignalBarLowColored
 SignalBarMediumColored
 SignalBarMedium2Colored
 SignalBarFullColored
 QuadrantEmpty
 Quadrant25
 Quadrant50
 Quadrant75
 QuadrantFull
 Quadrant25Colored
 Quadrant50Colored
 Quadrant75Colored
 QuadrantFullColored

And here is the list with the icons beside it

You can download the icon names list as an Excel file from here:

Power BI Icon Names (17016 downloads )

Conditional Formatting using DAX and Icon Names

Let’s say you want an icon set based on the [Sales] value. You can create a measure like below;

Sales Icon = 
 SWITCH(
     TRUE(),
     [Sales]>7000000,"TrafficHighLight",
     [Sales]>4000000,"TrafficMediumLight",
     "TrafficLowLight"
 )

Then in the table or matrix visual, go to the format and conditional formatting, select Icons for the field you want to set conditional formatting upon it. set the Icons as ON.

In the Conditional formatting window, Under Format by, select Field Value.

And then under “Based on field”, select the measure for Sales Icon.

Click on OK, and you will see the icons appearing on the table or matrix visual.

Here you go, you have the icon-based conditional formatting using icon names in the DAX expression. Having the conditional formatting coming from the DAX expression makes it dynamic, you can set the lower or upper threshold using slicers in the Power BI like the example I mentioned here;

Another Method: SVG

Another option to dynamically set icons is to use SVG code, and if you do that, then you are not limited to the default set of icons, you can do anything you want. SVG is a big topic itself, I highly recommend watching the amazing presentation by Laura Graham-Brown about SVG and how to use it in Power BI here.

Summary

Using icons for conditional formatting in Power BI is a great visualization option. This can be enhanced even more by bringing DAX into the equation and writing the conditional formatting there. You can use either icon names as listed in this article (originally referenced from Francisco’s blog) or use SVG (as Laura mentioned in her webinar).

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Reza Rad
Trainer, Consultant, Mentor
Reza Rad is a Microsoft Regional Director, an Author, Trainer, Speaker and Consultant. He has a BSc in Computer engineering; he has more than 20 years’ experience in data analysis, BI, databases, programming, and development mostly on Microsoft technologies. He is a Microsoft Data Platform MVP for 12 continuous years (from 2011 till now) for his dedication in Microsoft BI. Reza is an active blogger and co-founder of RADACAD. Reza is also co-founder and co-organizer of Difinity conference in New Zealand, Power BI Summit, and Data Insight Summit.
Reza is author of more than 14 books on Microsoft Business Intelligence, most of these books are published under Power BI category. Among these are books such as Power BI DAX Simplified, Pro Power BI Architecture, Power BI from Rookie to Rock Star, Power Query books series, Row-Level Security in Power BI and etc.
He is an International Speaker in Microsoft Ignite, Microsoft Business Applications Summit, Data Insight Summit, PASS Summit, SQL Saturday and SQL user groups. And He is a Microsoft Certified Trainer.
Reza’s passion is to help you find the best data solution, he is Data enthusiast.
His articles on different aspects of technologies, especially on MS BI, can be found on his blog: https://radacad.com/blog.

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