The Logic Apps workflow is a combination of triggers and associated actions. In this section, we will give you an overview of actions and how they play an important role in creating the workflow in Azure.
In Logic Apps, each workflow can have one or more actions based on their workflow requirements. Actions are nothing but a set of Microsoft-managed APIs that allow you to develop your workflow design. At the time of writing this book, Logic Apps has built-in support for more than 200 connectors with different sets of action attributes associated with each connector:
Each action within Logic Apps takes a different set of inputs and provides a different set of outputs based on the request data. The
high-level schema definition of a generic action is listed here:
In the following table, we will describe each property of the actions so that you can work easily...