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Extending Microsoft Business Central with Power Platform

You're reading from  Extending Microsoft Business Central with Power Platform

Product type Book
Published in Aug 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803240718
Pages 458 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Authors (2):
Kim Congleton Kim Congleton
Profile icon Kim Congleton
Shawn Sissenwein Shawn Sissenwein
Profile icon Shawn Sissenwein
View More author details

Table of Contents (19) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1 – Part Fundamentals
2. Chapter 1: Business Central and Power Platform – Better Together 3. Chapter 2: Getting to Know Business Central APIs 4. Chapter 3: Connecting to Business Central in the Cloud and On-Premises 5. Chapter 4: Working with Virtual Tables and Dataverse 6. Part 2 – Doing the Work of Designing, Building, and Implementing
7. Chapter 5: Best Practices for Building Power Apps for Business Central 8. Chapter 6: Building Flows for Business Central 9. Chapter 7: Delivering Solutions 10. Part 3 – Common Business Cases in Business Central for the Power Platform
11. Chapter 8: Automating Approvals and Reducing Manual Business Processes 12. Chapter 9: Connecting Power BI for Business Central Data 13. Chapter 10: Extending Functionality by Using Several Power Platform Solutions 14. Part 4 – Tips and Tricks for Common Issues
15. Chapter 11: User Adoption and Licensing Mapping Guide 16. Chapter 12: Understanding the Center of Excellence and Why It Is a Valuable Tool 17. Index 18. Other Books You May Enjoy

Common troubleshooting tips for approvals

There are some common errors that you may run into when working with approval templates or building flows from scratch. The first thing I do when building these flows is to keep it simple. I focus on getting the flow to work, and then I start laying in the complexity in small increments. It’s easier to have a working base than build something where you are not sure where it is broken.

Tip

Another tip is to use a condition to help you determine where a flow is failing. For example, I was trying to build a flow that notified me when someone had submitted a timesheet. I could not get the flow to run, and when I tested it, it never returned a failure. So, what I had to do was add my trigger and one action and then create a condition to check if I met the condition. If the condition was yes, then it sent me a notification stating that it had been met, while if it was no, then it told me that I still had a problem. I did this with each...

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