Book Image

Learn Microsoft PowerApps

By : Matthew Weston
Book Image

Learn Microsoft PowerApps

By: Matthew Weston

Overview of this book

Microsoft PowerApps provides a modern approach to building business applications for mobile, tablet, and browser. Learn Microsoft PowerApps will guide you in creating powerful and productive apps that will add value to your organization by helping you transform old and inefficient processes and workflows. Starting with an introduction to PowerApps, this book will help you set up and configure your first application. You’ll explore a variety of built-in templates and understand the key difference between types of applications such as canvas and model-driven apps, which are used to create apps for specific business scenarios. In addition to this, you’ll learn how to generate and integrate apps directly with SharePoint, and gain an understanding of PowerApps key components such as connectors and formulas. As you advance, you’ll be able to use various controls and data sources, including technologies such as GPS, and combine them to create an iterative app. Finally, the book will help you understand how PowerApps can use several Microsoft Power Automate and Azure functionalities to improve your applications. By the end of this PowerApps book, you’ll be ready to confidently develop lightweight business applications with minimal code.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started with PowerApps
6
Section 2: Developing Your PowerApp
11
Section 3: Extending the Capabilities of Your PowerApp
18
Section 4: Working with Model-Driven Apps
21
Section 5: Governing PowerApps
Creating Apps from SharePoint

In the previous chapters, we have looked at how we can create a new canvas app from a blank canvas. In this chapter, we will investigate the relationship between PowerApps and SharePoint, and how you can quickly and effectively create apps based on your data.

In the past, customized interfaces for SharePoint have been created using InfoPath or by using customizations such as web parts to allow a richer creation and edit experience. While InfoPath still exists and will still work with Office 365, the user experience of the created forms, which has its own styles and is not mobile responsive, means that it did not really fit into the bigger Office 365 picture. PowerApps is now starting to fill the void for that lack of tooling for creating customized forms.

To create an app from your data stored within SharePoint, you will first of all need to have...