List them in the order that the flow uses the dynamic content. If your flow uses more dynamic content from the app, list multiple by separating them with a comma. (TextInput2.Text) = The component and it’s property I want the dynamic content for the flow to come from. Run= type this after the flow name to get the flow to run. For the OnSelect property, start typing the flow name into the formula bar.ĬustomerArrivalNotification.Run(TextInput2.Text) Screenshot of formula in canvas app to run the flowĬustomerArrivalNotification= Replace this with your flow name. The OnSelect property for this button is where a formula will be used to run the flow. Here, the Submit button (Button1) is selected. Select the component you’d like to associate the flow with, such as a button or icon someone would press. Screenshot of selecting dynamic content from Power Apps trigger Back on your app is where you link the dynamic content with the right area of the app. Select this where you would like to place it in the flow. The dynamic content may initially appear as Ask in Power Apps. From the dynamic content pop-out, you will see content coming from the manual Power Apps trigger (it will be purple as shown below). Likely, you also want to reuse user input gathered via the app within the flow. This example has the Teams Post message in a chat or channel action underneath the trigger. Screenshot of flow editorīuild out your flow with the actions you want. Your flow will begin with the Power Apps trigger. You can rename the flow from the top left of the screen. The flow editor will open up within the same Power Apps window. There are templates you can select from if they address your use case, otherwise, click +Create from blank to customise your own. In this example, we’ll have an app that notifies staff via Microsoft Teams when someone presses the button to mark their arrival into a store.Ĭreate the flow by clicking on the Power Automate icon from the left hand side of the screen. You can build and manage your flows right from your canvas app, without navigating away. How can you do that without leaving your app and switching to another tool? The answer is Power Automate within the App Studio. If you are building a Power App you might want to automate some tasks or processes within your app- such as sending an email notification, creating a document or even updating a database record based on an input from the app.
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