User Review
( votes)Microsoft Power Automate provides rich and powerful tools, connectors, and logic to automate many common business processes within Dynamics 365 and the Dataverse as a whole. With flow functionality slowly replacing legacy Dynamics 365 workflows, Power Platform administrators and customizers now more than ever have the ability to build automations up and across to other products and solutions using various data connectors.
When Power Automate flows run into trouble, they tend to fail and remain in a failed state until a user observes the failure, attempts to resolve the error, and resubmits the flow run. This of course presents several challenges when it comes to error handling, one of which being the additional manual intervention needed to notice that a flow run has failed in the first place. There are, however, a few different methods that can be leveraged to prevent or mitigate flow failures, including a method to alert someone if a flow run is experiencing trouble.
What is Microsoft Power Automate?
Microsoft Power Automate allows organizations to develop low- or no-code ways of automating business tasks. With GUI drag-and-drop methods, flow builders can create simple to complex automation logic that interacts with not only the Dataverse, but also with hundreds of non-Microsoft products and solutions utilizing connectors.
Microsoft Power Automate is part of the Microsoft Power Platform, a suite of business tools and services that provides low- or no-code methods of working with data, including data analytics and transformation, database tools, automation, and artificial intelligence.
Microsoft Power Automate configure run after
For each action after the trigger, we can adjust that action’s configurations a bit further than what is initially presented. By clicking on the horizontal ellipsis in the upper right-hand corner of an action, we can configure it even more. We can add a comment or note, adjust the action’s settings, rename the action, peek the code behind the action, or configure the action’s run after settings…continue reading on www.beringer.net
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