Power Automate and Azure Logic Apps are workflow services that can automate your processes, business, or system and integrate with Microsoft and 3rd party services with over 300 connectors. These powerful services are designed to get you going quickly, building the workflow between business services providing that familiarity without having the steep learning curve.
In this exercise you'll learn how to automate the process of calling the Azure Function created earlier using Power Automate. The final version of the automation flow you'll create looks like the following:
The Azure Function in this example doesn't require authentication (it has publicly available data from GitHub) so no authentication is being used. It also doesn't require any specialized headers or queries. In cases where you have to do something more involved, you can learn about the various options at -automate/desktop-flows/actions-reference/web.
I love Microsoft Flow. Its central part of Office 365 automation really helps the user to build quick and simple automated processes. Flow is low code or no code, meaning that you do most of the flow design by clicking and dragging parts of the flow and connects them together.
Back in September 2017 I wrote a "Getting started with Microsoft Flow" article if you want to get a good overview of the product, but if not it is a free workflow service within Office 365 that allows you to automate certain tasks that you would normally do manually. For this task we were going to utilise the power of Flow to monitor the shared mailbox for certain alerts.
GitHub Advanced Security for Azure DevOps is now in preview and will natively embed automated security checks into the Azure DevOps platform, allowing developers to secure their code, secrets and supply chain without leaving their workflow using:
Gartner predicts that by 2025, legal departments will increase spending on legal technology threefold and 50% of legal work related to major corporate transactions will be automated. The opportunity is growing for developers to leverage the Microsoft Graph APIs to take advantage of this momentum and help organizations automate their workflows for litigation and investigations.
Microsoft Power Automate, which is formerly known as Microsoft Flow, is an online automation tool within the Microsoft 365 applications and add-ons. It is been used for the creation of automated workflows between apps and services to synchronize files, get notifications, and collect data. Below are few examples the automated workflows:
Apps built using PowerApps provide rich business logic and workflow capabilities to transform your manual business processes to digital, automated processes. Further, apps built using PowerApps have a responsive design, and can run seamlessly in browser or on mobile devices (phone or tablet). PowerApps "democratizes" the custom business app building experience by enabling users to build feature-rich, custom business apps without writing code.
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