Book Image

Enterprise Integration with Azure Logic Apps

By : Matthew Bennett
Book Image

Enterprise Integration with Azure Logic Apps

By: Matthew Bennett

Overview of this book

Logic Apps are a visual flowchart-like representation of common programming actions, and are a flexible way to create logic without writing a single line of code. Enterprise Integration with Azure Logic Apps is a comprehensive introduction for anyone new to Logic Apps which will boost your learning skills and allow you to create rich, complex, structured, and reusable logic with instant results. You'll begin by discovering how to navigate the Azure portal and understand how your objects can be zoned to a specific environment by using resource groups. Complete with hands-on tutorials, projects, and self-assessment questions, this easy-to-follow guide will teach you the benefits and foundations of Logic App logic design. As you advance, you'll find out how to manage your Azure environment in relation to Logic Apps and how to create elegant and reliable Logic Apps. With useful and practical explanations of how to get the most out of Logic App actions and triggers, you'll be able to ensure that your Logic Apps work efficiently and provide seamless integration for real-world scenarios without having to write code. By the end of this Logic Apps book, you'll be able to create complex and powerful Logic Apps within minutes, integrating large amounts of data on demand, enhancing your systems, and linking applications to improve user experience.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
1
Section 1: Logic App Fundamentals
7
Section 2: Logic App Design
13
Section 3: Logic App Maintenance and Management

Chapter 11: Fine-Tuning Logic App Runs with Run After

The process of creating and fine-tuning a logic app depends on knowing what data you are expecting to see, the format you want that data to end up using, and adding conditions to check whether operationally, procedurally, or programmatically related data can also be obtained, manipulated, and used as efficiently as possible. Sometimes, you only want a certain section of a logic app to work if the previous action was successful, failed, or was skipped. By creating different logic branches, you can do different things based on whether the previous action was successful or not.

In this chapter, you will learn the following:

  • We will look at when it is a good idea to branch your code, such as when there is no cross-branch dependency on other variables or data. We will also learn how to move from a series sequence (one branch) to parallel branches, and then how to remerge the branches for further processing.
  • We'll...