cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
Reply
EpicTriffid
Helper V
Helper V

Displaying distinct items sorted by soonest month

Afternoon all,

 

I'm looking to display two columns ("Month", "FAQ Item Name") from a SharePoint list that contains information about when certain reports are updated for an information app i'm creating.

I need to see a distinct list of "FAQ Item Name" (Which has multiple iterations of items each with different dates) where it shows the item with the soonest occurring month. This is so I can create a table that shows, for example, the next three reports that will be updated. I pull this into a "calPre" collection.

 

There is a slight problem in that "FAQ Item Name" is a lookup column, so it comes into a collection as a record that a table can't parse the text from, as well as having a number of blank records in that column that i need to filter out.

 

My solution to this is to pull that first collection (calPre) into a second collection (calPre2) that removes my blank rows and just gives me the two columns i'm interested it:

 

Clear(calPre2);
ForAll(
    Filter(
        calPre,
        Not(IsBlank(FAQ_x0020_Item_x0020_Name))
    ),
    Collect(
        calPre2,
        {
            FAQItem: Text('FAQ Item Name'.Value),
            dateMonth: Month
        }
    )
);

 

4.PNG

So now I have my two columns. You can see an instance above of the information that I might want to sort out: I would need to have a distinct list of the FAQItem column where the items that are returned are the ones with the soonest occurring date. My thinking is that I would create a new collection every time the app opens that would recalculate this, and I could sort it by the dateMonth column, then show the TopN number of results to get my 3 reports that will be updated soon. 

 

I've tried GroupBy, AddColumns, filtering by date, all the variations of Text() or Distinct().value/result and I either don't get anything returned, the dates are wrong, or it brings back lines and lines of [Object object] errors. 

 

I'm having real difficulty with something that I thought would be quite simple. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@EpicTriffid 

I would not suggest a table control for this as you will not have flexibility to control what is shown in the FAQs column.

 

If you are going to do it in a Table, then you will need to shape your data for that table. Set this as the Items property of the Table:

AddColumns(
    Filter(
        GroupBy(
            SortByColumns(
                AddColumns(yourDataSource,
                    "_FAQname", 'FAQ Item Name'.Value
                ),
                Month, Descending
            ),
            "_FAQname",
            "FAQs"
        ),
        !IsBlank(_FAQname)
    ),
    "MostRecent", First(FAQs).Month
)

Then show the _FAQname and the MostRecent column in your table.  Otherwise you will be trying to display objects...which will show as you have in the picture.

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!

View solution in original post

10 REPLIES 10
RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@EpicTriffid 

In general, the formula you want is the following:

 

Filter(
    GroupBy(
        SortByColumns(
            AddColumns(yourDataSource,
                "_FAQname", 'FAQ Item Name'.Value
            ),
            Month, Descending
        ),
        "_FAQname",
        "FAQs"
    ),
    !IsBlank(_FAQname)
)

 

This will provide you a table with distinct FAQ names (not blank) with a column called _FAQname that will have the FAQ name from the Lookup and a column called FAQs with a table of all the associated FAQs where the first record will be the most recent.

 

I hope this is helpful for you.

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!

Hi @RandyHayes 

 

So close! I plugged this into a ClearCollect called calendarCol and got out my distinct list, but returned a column with [object Object] in it? 

 

7.PNG

It could be that I misunderstand and the idea is to never show that column that would have [object Object] in it, but it would be helpful if I could view the date as well (which i assume is lurking inside that FAQs column above?)

 

Thank you by the way. I really appreciate the help.

RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@EpicTriffid 

I would not suggest a table control for this as you will not have flexibility to control what is shown in the FAQs column.

 

If you are going to do it in a Table, then you will need to shape your data for that table. Set this as the Items property of the Table:

AddColumns(
    Filter(
        GroupBy(
            SortByColumns(
                AddColumns(yourDataSource,
                    "_FAQname", 'FAQ Item Name'.Value
                ),
                Month, Descending
            ),
            "_FAQname",
            "FAQs"
        ),
        !IsBlank(_FAQname)
    ),
    "MostRecent", First(FAQs).Month
)

Then show the _FAQname and the MostRecent column in your table.  Otherwise you will be trying to display objects...which will show as you have in the picture.

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!

@RandyHayes 

 

I could kiss you right now! Thank you so much. I've dropped what you put into the ClearCollect statement again so I can use it on multiple screen, and also been able to apply a date so it won't show anything earlier than today or after an abitrary date in the future in case that's every a request. For the life of me I can't seem to get my head around the combination of addcolumns, showcolumns and groupby. It baffles me!

 

Thankyou again!

RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@EpicTriffid 

Personally I would skip the collection as you don't need one for this.  If you only need a static snapshot of the table, then you can just assign it to a variable.  If you need your table to be dynamic based on any changes in your app, then a dynamic variable will do.  A collection is overhead you probably don't need.

 

Add-, Show-, Rename-, Drop-columns are all data shaping tools.  In addition to that, GroupBy, ForAll and Ungroup allow you to shape your data in distinct ways.  ALL of the mentioned functions return tables that have been shaped by the function you use.  These tools are highly important to learn and use as they will rapidly increase your productivity and simplify your design.  For example, what you were originally trying to do by making one collection, then making another with changes to the first and so on, can all be achieved in one step.

 

Basic concepts:

AddColumns - your data does not have a column you want (static value, calculation, looked up value, another record, another tables, etc), or it has a column you can't use well (i.e. lookup, choice, etc.) and you really just want something simple.  

 

ShowColumns - your data has more columns than you want to use.  This is helpful in a scenario where you have lots of columns but only want to use a couple or one.  This is not highly needed, but it is helpful if you are passing a table of records to something that expects only certain columns.

 

RenameColumns - as its name implies, this renames a column.  Helpful function this one!  Good example is in the scenario where you have a combobox and need to set a default.  Your items of the combobox might be something like Distinct (which returns a table with a single column called Result), and you want to match a Title to it.  A record of Title will never match a Record of Result, so you can easily use this function to rename the Title to Result or the other way around.

 

DropColumns - this is the opposite of the ShowColumns function and will remove particular columns from the table.  This is helpful in scenarios where you have added columns to your table, but other aspects of your app may not like that added column to be in the schema, you can DropColumns on the added column or other.

 

GroupBy - in it's simple form, takes a table and returns a table that is grouped by the column(s) you specify.  If you provide, for example, a "Title" and a "Recs" for grouping, then the resulting table will have two column, the Title column and another column called Recs that will have all of the records from the original table that match the Distinct values in the Title column.   This is equivalent to doing a Distinct on all table records and then trying to look up each record that has that distinct value.  GroupBy will do it all in one shot.

 

Ungroup - does the inverse of the GroupBy.  It will take a table and ungroup by a column that you provide.

 

ForAll - by far the BEST data shaping tool in PowerApps.  Most use it incorrectly as a For/Loop...it is not.  It is a function that will iterate through ANY table you give it and will allow you to provide any record you want as a result in any schema format or...well, pretty much anything.  The sky is the limit with this one and it is very powerful for data shaping.

 

There are some others, but the above are the powerhouse workers.  

 

 

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!

@RandyHayes 

 

Absolutely fantastic. Thank you for the simple break down. I've managed to get through all my powerapps thus far minimally using the above functions, either by making sure I shape my data source in the best way, or by somehow cobbling code together from what I see online and managing to make it work. Often times I think the difficulty for me is understanding the flow of the syntax (i.e. what bit relates to what) in the code. 

 

Thank you again!

RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@EpicTriffid 

Yes, that can be confusing at first.  The thing is to look from the inside out.

 

DropColumns(
    SortByColumns(
        AddColumns(
            GroupBy(
                Filter(
                    someRecords,
                    someCriteria
                ),
                "someColumn", "_recs"
            ),
            "_someAdded", SomeValue
         ),
         "_someAdded"
    ),
    "_someAdded"
)

In the above, the first level is the someRecords in the middle.  When looking at the formula you can glean one important point about it...it is a table.  Because filter requires a table.

So from there, the Table is filtered by some criteria.

Filter returns a Table that is the input/datasource (first argument) to the GroupBy.

GroupBy returns a Table with (in this case) two columns - the distinct values of "someColumn" and all the records that match that particular distinct value.

The table returned from GroupBy then becomes the input/datasource (first argument) to the AddColumns function.

AddColumns will add a column called _someAdded to the record schema of the supplied table (remember - it has two columns that were returned from the GroupBy) and return that table.

The resulting table from AddColumns then becomes the input/datasource (first argument) to the SortByColumns function, which will return a table of all the records in the supplied table sorted, in this case, by the "_someAdded" column.

Finally, the table returned from the SortByColumns is supplied as the input/datasource (first argument) to the DropColumns function.  That function will return a table with the "_SomeAdded" column removed.

 

So, the end result of your formula is a table of data that has been "shaped" how you would want it for the Items property of a control or pretty much for anything you need a table for.

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!

@RandyHayes 

 

Ah, that puts in a format that makes alot more sense. I've done some coding in the past, and spent quite alot of time in PowerApps, but it's suprising to me that I've gotten through both the syntax in this, and in things like PowerBI, without an explicit understanding of "Inside Out".  I can't really explain how I've managed to get as far as I have. Thank you again @RandyHayes, your insight is invaluable.

RandyHayes
Super User
Super User

@EpicTriffid 

No problem at all.   By the way, you will get much further if you forget about what you learned doing the coding in the past.  PowerApps is a no-code platform.  If you've done formulas in Excel, then you are better off referencing that knowledge over any coding knowledge as PowerApps was designed around the concept of formulas like Excel.

_____________________________________________________________________________________
Digging it? - Click on the Thumbs Up below. Solved your problem? - Click on Accept as Solution below. Others seeking the same answers will be happy you did.
NOTE: My normal response times will be Mon to Fri from 1 PM to 10 PM UTC (and lots of other times too!)
Check out my PowerApps Videos too! And, follow me on Twitter @RandyHayes

Really want to show your appreciation? Buy Me A Cup Of Coffee!

Helpful resources

Announcements

Tuesday Tip: Getting Started with Private Messages & Macros

Welcome to TUESDAY TIPS, your weekly connection with the most insightful tips and tricks that empower both newcomers and veterans in the Power Platform Community! Every Tuesday, we bring you a curated selection of the finest advice, distilled from the resources and tools in the Community. Whether you’re a seasoned member or just getting started, Tuesday Tips are the perfect compass guiding you across the dynamic landscape of the Power Platform Community.   As our community family expands each week, we revisit our essential tools, tips, and tricks to ensure you’re well-versed in the community’s pulse. Keep an eye on the News & Announcements for your weekly Tuesday Tips—you never know what you may learn!   This Week's Tip: Private Messaging & Macros in Power Apps Community   Do you want to enhance your communication in the Community and streamline your interactions? One of the best ways to do this is to ensure you are using Private Messaging--and the ever-handy macros that are available to you as a Community member!   Our Knowledge Base article about private messaging and macros is the best place to find out more. Check it out today and discover some key tips and tricks when it comes to messages and macros:   Private Messaging: Learn how to enable private messages in your community profile and ensure you’re connected with other community membersMacros Explained: Discover the convenience of macros—prewritten text snippets that save time when posting in forums or sending private messagesCreating Macros: Follow simple steps to create your own macros for efficient communication within the Power Apps CommunityUsage Guide: Understand how to apply macros in posts and private messages, enhancing your interaction with the Community For detailed instructions and more information, visit the full page in your community today:Power Apps: Enabling Private Messaging & How to Use Macros (Power Apps)Power Automate: Enabling Private Messaging & How to Use Macros (Power Automate)  Copilot Studio: Enabling Private Messaging &How to Use Macros (Copilot Studio) Power Pages: Enabling Private Messaging & How to Use Macros (Power Pages)

April 4th Copilot Studio Coffee Chat | Recording Now Available

Did you miss the Copilot Studio Coffee Chat on April 4th? This exciting and informative session with Dewain Robinson and Gary Pretty is now available to watch in our Community Galleries!   This AMA discussed how Copilot Studio is using the conversational AI-powered technology to aid and assist in the building of chatbots. Dewain is a Principal Program Manager with Copilot Studio. Gary is a Principal Program Manager with Copilot Studio and Conversational AI. Both of them had great insights to share with the community and answered some very interesting questions!     As part of our ongoing Coffee Chat AMA series, this engaging session gives the Community the unique opportunity to learn more about the latest Power Platform Copilot plans, where we’ll focus, and gain insight into upcoming features. We’re looking forward to hearing from the community at the next AMA, so hang on to your questions!   Watch the recording in the Gallery today: April 4th Copilot Studio Coffee Chat AMA

Tuesday Tip: Subscriptions & Notifications

TUESDAY TIPS are our way of communicating helpful things we've learned or shared that have helped members of the Community. Whether you're just getting started or you're a seasoned pro, Tuesday Tips will help you know where to go, what to look for, and navigate your way through the ever-growing--and ever-changing--world of the Power Platform Community! We cover basics about the Community, provide a few "insider tips" to make your experience even better, and share best practices gleaned from our most active community members and Super Users.   With so many new Community members joining us each week, we'll also review a few of our "best practices" so you know just "how" the Community works, so make sure to watch the News & Announcements each week for the latest and greatest Tuesday Tips!   This Week: All About Subscriptions & Notifications We don't want you to a miss a thing in the Community! The best way to make sure you know what's going on in the News & Announcements, to blogs you follow, or forums and galleries you're interested in is to subscribe! These subscriptions ensure you receive automated messages about the most recent posts and replies. Even better, there are multiple ways you can subscribe to content and boards in the community! (Please note: if you have created an AAD (Azure Active Directory) account you won't be able to receive e-mail notifications.)   Subscribing to a Category  When you're looking at the entire category, select from the Options drop down and choose Subscribe.     You can then choose to Subscribe to all of the boards or select only the boards you want to receive notifications. When you're satisfied with your choices, click Save.   Subscribing to a Topic You can also subscribe to a single topic by clicking Subscribe from the Options drop down menu, while you are viewing the topic or in the General board overview, respectively.     Subscribing to a Label Find the labels at the bottom left of a post.From a particular post with a label, click on the label to filter by that label. This opens a window containing a list of posts with the label you have selected. Click Subscribe.           Note: You can only subscribe to a label at the board level. If you subscribe to a label named 'Copilot' at board #1, it will not automatically subscribe you to an identically named label at board #2. You will have to subscribe twice, once at each board.   Bookmarks Just like you can subscribe to topics and categories, you can also bookmark topics and boards from the same menus! Simply go to the Topic Options drop down menu to bookmark a topic or the Options drop down to bookmark a board. The difference between subscribing and bookmarking is that subscriptions provide you with notifications, whereas bookmarks provide you a static way of easily accessing your favorite boards from the My subscriptions area.   Managing & Viewing Your Subscriptions & Bookmarks To manage your subscriptions, click on your avatar and select My subscriptions from the drop-down menu.     From the Subscriptions & Notifications tab, you can manage your subscriptions, including your e-mail subscription options, your bookmarks, your notification settings, and your email notification format.     You can see a list of all your subscriptions and bookmarks and choose which ones to delete, either individually or in bulk, by checking multiple boxes.     A Note on Following Friends on Mobile Adding someone as a friend or selecting Follow in the mobile view does not allow you to subscribe to their activity feed. You will merely be able to see your friends’ biography, other personal information, or online status, and send messages more quickly by choosing who to send the message to from a list, as opposed to having to search by username.

Monthly Community User Group Update | April 2024

The monthly Community User Group Update is your resource for discovering User Group meetings and events happening around the world (and virtually), welcoming new User Groups to our Community, and more! Our amazing Community User Groups are an important part of the Power Platform Community, with more than 700 Community User Groups worldwide, we know they're a great way to engage personally, while giving our members a place to learn and grow together.   This month, we welcome 3 new User Groups in India, Wales, and Germany, and feature 8 User Group Events across Power Platform and Dynamics 365. Find out more below. New Power Platform User Groups   Power Platform Innovators (India) About: Our aim is to foster a collaborative environment where we can share upcoming Power Platform events, best practices, and valuable content related to Power Platform. Whether you’re a seasoned expert or a newcomer looking to learn, this group is for you. Let’s empower each other to achieve more with Power Platform. Join us in shaping the future of digital transformation!   Power Platform User Group (Wales) About: A Power Platform User Group in Wales (predominantly based in Cardiff but will look to hold sessions around Wales) to establish a community to share learnings and experience in all parts of the platform.   Power Platform User Group (Hannover) About: This group is for anyone who works with the services of Microsoft Power Platform or wants to learn more about it and no-code/low-code. And, of course, Microsoft Copilot application in the Power Platform.   New Dynamics365 User Groups   Ellucian CRM Recruit UK (United Kingdom) About: A group for United Kingdom universities using Ellucian CRM Recruit to manage their admissions process, to share good practice and resolve issues.    Business Central Mexico (Mexico City) About:  A place to find documentation, learning resources, and events focused on user needs in Mexico. We meet to discuss and answer questions about the current features in the standard localization that Microsoft provides, and what you only find in third-party locations. In addition, we focus on what's planned for new standard versions, recent legislation requirements, and more. Let's work together to drive request votes for Microsoft for features that aren't currently found—but are indispensable.   Dynamics 365 F&O User Group (Dublin) About: The Dynamics 365 F&O User Group - Ireland Chapter meets up in person at least twice yearly in One Microsoft Place Dublin for users to have the opportunity to have conversations on mutual topics, find out what’s new and on the Dynamics 365 FinOps Product Roadmap, get insights from customer and partner experiences, and access to Microsoft subject matter expertise.  Upcoming Power Platform Events    PAK Time (Power Apps Kwentuhan) 2024 #6 (Phillipines, Online) This is a continuation session of Custom API. Sir Jun Miano will be sharing firsthand experience on setting up custom API and best practices. (April 6, 2024)       Power Apps: Creating business applications rapidly (Sydney) At this event, learn how to choose the right app on Power Platform, creating a business application in an hour, and tips for using Copilot AI. While we recommend attending all 6 events in the series, each session is independent of one another, and you can join the topics of your interest. Think of it as a “Hop On, Hop Off” bus! Participation is free, but you need a personal computer (laptop) and we provide the rest. We look forward to seeing you there! (April 11, 2024)     April 2024 Cleveland Power Platform User Group (Independence, Ohio) Kickoff the meeting with networking, and then our speaker will share how to create responsive and intuitive Canvas Apps using features like Variables, Search and Filtering. And how PowerFx rich functions and expressions makes configuring those functionalities easier. Bring ideas to discuss and engage with other community members! (April 16, 2024)     Dynamics 365 and Power Platform 2024 Wave 1 Release (NYC, Online) This session features Aric Levin, Microsoft Business Applications MVP and Technical Architect at Avanade and Mihir Shah, Global CoC Leader of Microsoft Managed Services at IBM. We will cover some of the new features and enhancements related to the Power Platform, Dataverse, Maker Portal, Unified Interface and the Microsoft First Party Apps (Microsoft Dynamics 365) that were announced in the Microsoft Dynamics 365 and Power Platform 2024 Release Wave 1 Plan. (April 17, 2024)     Let’s Explore Copilot Studio Series: Bot Skills to Extend Your Copilots (Makati National Capital Reg... Join us for the second installment of our Let's Explore Copilot Studio Series, focusing on Bot Skills. Learn how to enhance your copilot's abilities to automate tasks within specific topics, from booking appointments to sending emails and managing tasks. Discover the power of Skills in expanding conversational capabilities. (April 30, 2024)   Upcoming Dynamics365 Events    Leveraging Customer Managed Keys (CMK) in Dynamics 365 (Noida, Uttar Pradesh, Online) This month's featured topic: Leveraging Customer Managed Keys (CMK) in Dynamics 365, with special guest Nitin Jain from Microsoft. We are excited and thankful to him for doing this session. Join us for this online session, which should be helpful to all Dynamics 365 developers, Technical Architects and Enterprise architects who are implementing Dynamics 365 and want to have more control on the security of their data over Microsoft Managed Keys. (April 11, 2024)     Stockholm D365 User Group April Meeting (Stockholm) This is a Swedish user group for D365 Finance and Operations, AX2012, CRM, CE, Project Operations, and Power BI.  (April 17, 2024)         Transportation Management in D365 F&SCM Q&A Session (Toronto, Online) Calling all Toronto UG members and beyond! Join us for an engaging and informative one-hour Q&A session, exclusively focused on Transportation Management System (TMS) within Dynamics 365 F&SCM. Whether you’re a seasoned professional or just curious about TMS, this event is for you. Bring your questions! (April 26, 2024)   Leaders, Create Your Events!    Leaders of existing User Groups, don’t forget to create your events within the Community platform. By doing so, you’ll enable us to share them in future posts and newsletters. Let’s spread the word and make these gatherings even more impactful! Stay tuned for more updates, inspiring stories, and collaborative opportunities from and for our Community User Groups.   P.S. Have an event or success story to share? Reach out to us – we’d love to feature you. Just leave a comment or send a PM here in the Community!

Exclusive LIVE Community Event: Power Apps Copilot Coffee Chat with Copilot Studio Product Team

We have closed kudos on this post at this time. Thank you to everyone who kudo'ed their RSVP--your invitations are coming soon!  Miss the window to RSVP? Don't worry--you can catch the recording of the meeting this week in the Community.  Details coming soon!   *****   It's time for the SECOND Power Apps Copilot Coffee Chat featuring the Copilot Studio product team, which will be held LIVE on April 3, 2024 at 9:30 AM Pacific Daylight Time (PDT).     This is an incredible opportunity to connect with members of the Copilot Studio product team and ask them anything about Copilot Studio. We'll share our special guests with you shortly--but we want to encourage to mark your calendars now because you will not want to miss the conversation.   This live event will give you the unique opportunity to learn more about Copilot Studio plans, where we’ll focus, and get insight into upcoming features. We’re looking forward to hearing from the community, so bring your questions!   TO GET ACCESS TO THIS EXCLUSIVE AMA: Kudo this post to reserve your spot! Reserve your spot now by kudoing this post.  Reservations will be prioritized on when your kudo for the post comes through, so don't wait! Click that "kudo button" today.   Invitations will be sent on April 2nd.Users posting Kudos after April 2nd. at 9AM PDT may not receive an invitation but will be able to view the session online after conclusion of the event. Give your "kudo" today and mark your calendars for April 3rd, 2024 at 9:30 AM PDT and join us for an engaging and informative session!

Tuesday Tip: Blogging in the Community is a Great Way to Start

TUESDAY TIPS are our way of communicating helpful things we've learned or shared that have helped members of the Community. Whether you're just getting started or you're a seasoned pro, Tuesday Tips will help you know where to go, what to look for, and navigate your way through the ever-growing--and ever-changing--world of the Power Platform Community! We cover basics about the Community, provide a few "insider tips" to make your experience even better, and share best practices gleaned from our most active community members and Super Users.   With so many new Community members joining us each week, we'll also review a few of our "best practices" so you know just "how" the Community works, so make sure to watch the News & Announcements each week for the latest and greatest Tuesday Tips!   This Week's Topic: Blogging in the Community Are you new to our Communities and feel like you may know a few things to share, but you're not quite ready to start answering questions in the forums? A great place to start is the Community blog! Whether you've been using Power Platform for awhile, or you're new to the low-code revolution, the Community blog is a place for anyone who can write, has some great insight to share, and is willing to commit to posting regularly! In other words, we want YOU to join the Community blog.    Why should you consider becoming a blog author? Here are just a few great reasons. 🎉   Learn from Each Other: Our community is like a bustling marketplace of ideas. By sharing your experiences and insights, you contribute to a dynamic ecosystem where makers learn from one another. Your unique perspective matters! Collaborate and Innovate: Imagine a virtual brainstorming session where minds collide, ideas spark, and solutions emerge. That’s what our community blog offers—a platform for collaboration and innovation. Together, we can build something extraordinary. Showcase the Power of Low-Code: You know that feeling when you discover a hidden gem? By writing about your experience with your favorite Power Platform tool, you’re shining a spotlight on its capabilities and real-world applications. It’s like saying, “Hey world, check out this amazing tool!” Earn Trust and Credibility: When you share valuable information, you become a trusted resource. Your fellow community members rely on your tips, tricks, and know-how. It’s like being the go-to friend who always has the best recommendations. Empower Others: By contributing to our community blog, you empower others to level up their skills. Whether it’s a nifty workaround, a time-saving hack, or an aha moment, your words have impact. So grab your keyboard, brew your favorite beverage, and start writing! Your insights matter and your voice counts! With every blog shared in the Community, we all do a better job of tackling complex challenges with gusto. 🚀   Welcome aboard, future blog author! ✍️✏️🌠 Get started blogging across the Power Platform Communities today! Just follow one of the links below to begin your blogging adventure.   Power Apps: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Power-Apps-Community-Blog/bg-p/PowerAppsBlog Power Automate: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Power-Automate-Community-Blog/bg-p/MPABlog Copilot Studio: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Copilot-Studio-Community-Blog/bg-p/PVACommunityBlog Power Pages: https://powerusers.microsoft.com/t5/Power-Pages-Community-Blog/bg-p/mpp_blog   When you follow the link, look for the Message Admins button like this on the page's right rail, and let us know you're interested. We can't wait to connect with you and help you get started. Thanks for being part of our incredible community--and thanks for becoming part of the community blog!

Top Solution Authors
Top Kudoed Authors
Users online (6,343)