

Hey @JBJ! Please let me get back later today to try to understand what is it that you are trying to do LOL.
In the meantime, I can for sure confirm that you cannot dynamically set up a dynamic filter on a lookup.
Mike, Consultant @ Automatic Nation
Hey @JBJ! Please let me get back later today to try to understand what is it that you are trying to do LOL.
In the meantime, I can for sure confirm that you cannot dynamically set up a dynamic filter on a lookup.
Mike, Consultant @ Automatic Nation
Hey @Mike_AutomaticN,
Thanks for offering your help. I solved my problem in a dirty way.
Take care.
Hey @Mike_AutomaticN,
Thanks for offering your help. I solved my problem in a dirty way.
Take care.
@JBJ- what workaround did you settle with? I believe I have a similar issue, that I suspect only an Automation Script can resolve.
I've tried a few different rollup/lookup methods, but I too always lack a dynamic filter to execute in my rollups/lookups which would then allow the reduced sum data to return.
@JBJ- what workaround did you settle with? I believe I have a similar issue, that I suspect only an Automation Script can resolve.
I've tried a few different rollup/lookup methods, but I too always lack a dynamic filter to execute in my rollups/lookups which would then allow the reduced sum data to return.
@Karlstens I ended up linking [Revenue Items] directly to both [Deals] and [Client Sessions]. And to avoid any data inconsistency, I added a dynamic filter to the {Client Sessions} linked record field on [Revenue Items} to make it possible to add only client sessions matching their associated deal.
Horrible for people coming from SQL, but effective in Airtable.
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