The Microsoft Flow team wants to showcase your story! Come and fill out our form and tell us YOUR Microsoft Flow Story for a chance to be featured on the customers.microsoft.com page! We cant wait to share all of the cool things that you are doing!
Learn everything you ever wanted to know about Microsoft Flow directly from the team that builds it — and meet other Flow users — at the first conference to feature entire tracks dedicated to Flow. The Microsoft Business Application Summit will be held on July 22-24 in Seattle, and you can sign up today.
This post will introduce parallel branches as a way to achieve concurrent Flow logic. It shows how to use parallel branches to send periodic reminders to approvers that stop once the approval is completed.
This week, we’re introducing several new updates in Microsoft Flow. We have more sharing capabilities: share with SharePoint lists and libraries, and Office 365 modern groups. We also have a number of connector updates, and, new error analytics for understanding flow failures.
In this flow of the week come see how we manage the flow of the week using Microsoft Flow… Wow , that’s a tongue twister. Come and learn how to automate email follow ups based on SharePoint list entries… There that’s better!
Last week we had seven sessions that focused on Microsoft Flow (and the broader Business Application Platform), and if you weren’t able to join in person you can now watch them on-demand.
In this blog post, Serge Luca will illustrate how to build flows that need to use a State Machine. Although Microsoft Flow doesn’t have an out-of-box construct for a State Machine – you can build one by using a loop and a switch case.
Starting this week you can use Markdown to format the approval details that you send. These approvals will show up formatted in the Flow mobile app, the Flow website and the flow emails.