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Learn Microsoft PowerApps

You're reading from   Learn Microsoft PowerApps Build customized business applications without writing any code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789805826
Length 560 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Matthew Weston Matthew Weston
Author Profile Icon Matthew Weston
Matthew Weston
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started with PowerApps FREE CHAPTER
2. Introducing PowerApps 3. Creating Your First Canvas PowerApp 4. Creating Apps from SharePoint 5. Publishing and Leveraging PowerApps 6. Section 2: Developing Your PowerApp
7. Exploring Controls 8. Exploring Formulas 9. Working with Data 10. Introducing Connectors 11. Section 3: Extending the Capabilities of Your PowerApp
12. Using GPS in PowerApps 13. Working with Images and Barcodes 14. Securing Your PowerApps 15. Working Offline 16. Using Power Automate with PowerApps 17. Using Azure with PowerApps 18. Section 4: Working with Model-Driven Apps
19. Introducing Model-Driven Apps 20. Creating Model-Driven Apps 21. Section 5: Governing PowerApps
22. Exploring Environments within Our Tenancy 23. Assessments 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Creating and interacting with collections

Collections are one of the most common methods for storing data locally within your PowerApp, and once you start developing, you will find that they are extremely useful in a number of different ways. They can be built dynamically while you're running your app, as well as when your app loads. This means you could use it to retrieve data from a data source and store it locally so that it can be manipulated before being written back. In this chapter, we are going to use collections to build data that we can then interact with using our output controls, galleries, and tables.

A collection can be compared to a table, where you have a number of rows of data with each attribute being expressed as a column. Collections can store arrays of data within them, so they're slightly more complex than just a simple data table, but the premise is the same.

Filling collections

When you're filling in a collection, you can do two different things...

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