I\'ve created a report in SSRS with two report parameters. I\'d like the second to update it\'s values based on the selection in the first. The first is a list of sales agen
You first create a dataset with a list of items which the user will select from.
Select ID,Agentname from Agents Order by Agentname
You then create the second dataset;
eg. Select ID,ItemName from Orders where agentid=@agentid
IN your report paramenter, you click on agentid parameter and then from a Query on available values. You select dataset1 and ID as value and AgentName as Label.
Your last dataset will be the actual data. In this You create your statement like :
Select Quantity, Amount From Orderdetails where OrderID=@orderid
In reporting service, you go to parameter and the set Order to get value from Dataset2
So the Order of parameter should be agentid, orderid. Reporting Service will automatically prompt for parameter by order.
I haven't tried this myself, but I saw an example where they configured Available Values to come from a query, then used an expression to specify the query. The expression included the value of the first parameter.
You will most likely need to create a shared data source for the multiple datasets
if you preview the report, it will ask for a value entered for param_name before viewing the report...
now go to data tab, and add new dataset.... call it dsPopParam
Important note: in case the report did not render or exception was thrown, just switch to data tab again, select the report dataset and execute the query, you will be prompted to enter a value for param_name...enter it and execute it... then switch to preview tab and
This works automagically if you order your parameters and datasets correctly
WHERE
clause in the datasets to make the dependencies correct across parameter variablesThis will work if your WHERE
clause in the second and subsequent datasets have variables that SSRS knows are populated from earlier parameters.
As an example, I have three datasets from the venerable pubs
database (sample in 2000).
pubslist
is used to populate the @p parameter, and looks like this:
select pub_id, pub_name from publishers
titleslist
populates the @t parameter, and looks like this:
select title_id, title from titles where pub_id = @p
Finally, reportdataset
looks like this:
select title, price, ytd_sales from titles where title_id = @t
The order of the parameters in the Report | Report Parameters
menu is crucial; because the datasets must be executed in the order shown above, and the @t parameter is in a dataset that relies on the @p parameter being set first, we move @p to the top of the list.
Now, SSRS evaluates the dataset needed to fill the dropdown for the first parameter with labels. It relies on a dataset that doesn't need a parameter, so can be produced immediately.
Then, having got that parameter value, it can populate the second parameter's dropdown. That in turn results in the report being produced.