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  • Book Overview & Buying Microsoft Power Pages in Action
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Microsoft Power Pages in Action

Microsoft Power Pages in Action

By : Hussona, Danilo Capuano
5 (3)
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Microsoft Power Pages in Action

Microsoft Power Pages in Action

5 (3)
By: Hussona, Danilo Capuano

Overview of this book

Microsoft Power Apps Pages in Action is a comprehensive beginner's guide for effortlessly building and customizing functional-rich web apps. Packed with real-world examples, it offers a practical understanding of the Power Pages environment. You’ll understand web pages by creating data tables and forms, progress to adding web pages, and delve into advanced techniques for seamlessly integrating web apps. Now, you’ll learn how to create responsive web pages, automate web apps, and use ChatGPT-assisted coding with code snippets for common requirements or needs. As you progress, you'll be guided on crafting portals and websites, encompassing the utilization of various functionalities and layouts. Progressively, you’ll discover how to seamlessly integrate them into your web pages across multiple Microsoft technologies, including Dataverse and Power Automate. Towards the end, you'll also learn how to implement cloud flows to provide access to external services and use cloud flows to provide user experiences running processes off the page. By the end of the book, you’ll have a solid understanding of Power Pages and be able to create web applications tailored to your unique needs.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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Creating a Power Pages workflow button

Now, Brenda has said that she wants a button on the incidents page that will set the incident’s status when it’s completed and submitted by the incident originator. The originator, in most cases, will be the site manager or project manager. Brenda and Sarah agree to call the button Approve Submission. Sarah thinks about this and decides the easiest way is to use a workflow button, which she can place on the incident web page’s basic form and also have the button filtered for its visibility. Sarah writes out an Agile user story for the use case.

Agile user story – creating a workflow button for incident status

As a site manager, I want to have a button on the incident page to approve the submission so that I can easily update the status of an incident to Approved Submission.

Description

Brenda wants a button on the incident form page to allow site managers and project managers to set the incident status to...

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