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Azure Serverless Computing Cookbook

You're reading from   Azure Serverless Computing Cookbook Build and monitor Azure applications hosted on serverless architecture using Azure Functions

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789615265
Length 424 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
Concepts
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Authors (2):
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Jason Marston Jason Marston
Author Profile Icon Jason Marston
Jason Marston
Praveen Kumar Sreeram Praveen Kumar Sreeram
Author Profile Icon Praveen Kumar Sreeram
Praveen Kumar Sreeram
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Developing Cloud Applications Using Function Triggers and Bindings FREE CHAPTER 2. Working with Notifications Using the SendGrid and Twilio Services 3. Seamless Integration of Azure Functions with Azure Services 4. Understanding the Integrated Developer Experience of Visual Studio Tools 5. Exploring Testing Tools for the Validation of Azure Functions 6. Monitoring and Troubleshooting Azure Serverless Services 7. Developing Reliable Serverless Applications Using Durable Functions 8. Bulk Import of Data Using Azure Durable Functions and Cosmos DB 9. Implementing Best Practices for Azure Functions 10. Configuring of Serverless Applications in the Production Environment 11. Implementing and Deploying Continuous Integration Using Azure DevOps 12. Other Books You May Enjoy

Monitoring tweets using Logic Apps and notifying users when a popular user tweets

One of my colleagues, who works for a social grievance management project, is responsible for monitoring the problems that users post on social media platforms, such as Facebook, Twitter, and so on. Recently, he faced the problem of continuously monitoring the tweets that were posted on his customer's Twitter handle with specific hashtags. His main job was to respond quickly to the tweets by users with a huge follower count, say, users with more than 50,000 followers. So, he was looking for a solution that kept monitoring a particular hashtag and alerted him whenever a user with more than 50,000 followers tweeted so that he could quickly have his team respond to that user.

Note that for the sake of simplicity, we will have the condition check for 200 followers instead of 50,000 followers.

Before...

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