cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
Reply
ChrisMendoza
Responsive Resident
Responsive Resident

Get events (V4) Filter Query

Looking at the JSON output does anyone know why

 

 

 

 

Filter Query =
subject eq 'Out of Office'

 

 

 

 

image.png

runs successfully however

 

 

 

 

Filter Query =
organizer eq 'organizer.email@address.com'

 

 

 

 

image.png

 

 

 

 

Invalid filter clause
clientRequestId: 994af462-d35a-4d8c-8640-1c767fdc6b3a
serviceRequestId: 7a96997c-ed9c-4e62-b04b-ce7c3ce7b962

 

 

 

 

 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
poweractivate
Most Valuable Professional
Most Valuable Professional

@ChrisMendoza 

 


@ChrisMendoza wrote:

The JSON does not show an object of organizer

Despite this, once you use Filter Query, you are entering another world - the world of where the underlying infrastructure is.

 

For example, try this. I just tried it and it worked, it might amaze you:

 

1) Go to e-mail inbox and look at the display name of the person for which there is an event invite on the organizer. Example: an event coming from My Events with an email address of mycoolevents@example.com - would mean you should use My Events as the test value

 

2) Use filter query of 

 

organizer/emailAddress/name eq 'My Events'

 

 

3) To your possible bewilderment, you may notice it has returned a collection including events by the organizer you might have been expecting it to. This is despite the fact that organizer: "some value" is the only JSON shown. That simple organizer: "some value"  is actually the abstraction, that is not what is really returned in the intermediate step the infrastructure is using. Power Automate is telling you organizer: "some value" but that is not really what is happening. It is actually:

 

 

    "organizer":{
        "emailAddress":{
            "name":"Samantha Booth",
            "address":"samanthab@a830edad905084922E17020313.onmicrosoft.com"
        }
    }

 

 

In most of Power Automate you don't worry about this, but because you want to use the Filter Query and OData you are interacting with the layer below the abstraction so then this reasoning I introduced may begin to apply here.

 

There is an additional layer of an issue though. You can only filter by the name in this way. I believe the underlying endpoint has not implemented the email address filtering so even if you use 

 

 

organizer/emailAddress/address eq 'organizer.email@address.com'

 

 

It will unfortunately not work for Email due to filter not being implemented and this may explain why the above will end up actually returning InternalServerError in Power Automate - so instead, only this query will work and you must use the Name instead only (which also happens to be mentioned in the link as well):

 

 

 

organizer/emailAddress/name eq 'My Events'

 

 

This one works correctly for 'name' whereas the one for 'address' does not work, for the reason specified above..

 

Currently, I don't have another idea if you have to use Email other than to resort to a workaround like the one posted by @ccc333ab  of just getting the whole thing and filtering it. I do believe that in some cases, that specific workaround may only work if the sample size is small enough, so depending on your scenario, you might need to just resort to filtering by name rather than email address in the OData Query as I am suggesting here:

 

 

organizer/emailAddress/name eq 'My Events'

 

 

if you need a solution involving the OData Filter specifically.

 

I do understand this may not be ideal to filter by the name and not the email address - however, the filtering of email address in that specific way might unfortunately not be supported right now.

 

 

You also mentioned that this worked:

@equals(triggerBody()?['organizer'],'someEmailAddress@onmicrosoft.com')

The reason for that is, since the Trigger is not a Filter OData Query, this uses the abstraction, and would use the object as you saw it returned in Power Automate JSON, and not the underlying one. The underlying one is only applicable in the OData queries specifically.

 

Check if this helps explain it.

 

View solution in original post

7 REPLIES 7
ccc333ab
Solution Sage
Solution Sage

Try using Filter Array instead? Something like:

ccc333ab_0-1628723916780.png

 

poweractivate
Most Valuable Professional
Most Valuable Professional

@ChrisMendoza 

 

It could be because in the underlying Graph API the schema for subject is just "subject" (simple one-level schema)

 

"subject":"Plan summer company picnic",

 

whereas the schema for the organizer's email address is organizer/emailAddress/address and it is buried deeper.

 

  "organizer":{
    "emailAddress":{
      "name":"Adele Vance",
      "address":"AdeleV@contoso.onmicrosoft.com"
    }
  }

 

When I tested though, organizer/emailAddress/address results in InternalServerError - only organizer/emailAddress/name works for me (and I did not thoroughly test if it works. Since it's 'name' it would filter on the Name, not the email address).

 

So the above could be the reason.

In case the solution from @ccc333ab is not desirable to you due to the usage of workaround rather than usage of the Filter Query itself, you can try this filter query to see if it works:

 

 

organizer/emailAddress/name eq 'a'

 

Please note caveat, that you may need to give the name of the user (not the email address) where it says 'a' above (and keeping the single quotes of course) for above to work. Replacing the part that says 'name' above with the one that should be there, 'address' - unfortunately gives an unexpected result of the infinite retry and InternalServerError for me. I might see if I can check more closely in case whether I can give you the working solution with using Filter Query and using the Email Address of the organizer in it.

poweractivate
Most Valuable Professional
Most Valuable Professional

@ChrisMendoza 

 

To tell you the truth, I think that even if you apply what I believe is the most ideal answer to your question, which is to use an expression like this:

 

 

organizer/emailAddress/address eq 'organizer.email@address.com'

 

 

 

This cannot be done because it might be impossible with query to filter by email address of organizer in particular.  The suggestion even in this link is to filter by name instead such as in my given reply.

 

I might check closer in case for another way still using the filter query somehow, but this might be why. 

Sure that would/should work. Understanding and learning the ODATA filter query and why it doesn't work when the values are in same 'object' is my goal. Thank you.

The JSON does not show an object of organizer. I did at first try body/value/organizer at which point I tested subject. Trying your solution the same result occurs. Incidentally, using the same logic as a trigger condition on 'When a new event is created (V3)' works just fine.

@equals(triggerBody()?['organizer'],'someEmailAddress@onmicrosoft.com')
poweractivate
Most Valuable Professional
Most Valuable Professional

@ChrisMendoza 

 


@ChrisMendoza wrote:

The JSON does not show an object of organizer

Despite this, once you use Filter Query, you are entering another world - the world of where the underlying infrastructure is.

 

For example, try this. I just tried it and it worked, it might amaze you:

 

1) Go to e-mail inbox and look at the display name of the person for which there is an event invite on the organizer. Example: an event coming from My Events with an email address of mycoolevents@example.com - would mean you should use My Events as the test value

 

2) Use filter query of 

 

organizer/emailAddress/name eq 'My Events'

 

 

3) To your possible bewilderment, you may notice it has returned a collection including events by the organizer you might have been expecting it to. This is despite the fact that organizer: "some value" is the only JSON shown. That simple organizer: "some value"  is actually the abstraction, that is not what is really returned in the intermediate step the infrastructure is using. Power Automate is telling you organizer: "some value" but that is not really what is happening. It is actually:

 

 

    "organizer":{
        "emailAddress":{
            "name":"Samantha Booth",
            "address":"samanthab@a830edad905084922E17020313.onmicrosoft.com"
        }
    }

 

 

In most of Power Automate you don't worry about this, but because you want to use the Filter Query and OData you are interacting with the layer below the abstraction so then this reasoning I introduced may begin to apply here.

 

There is an additional layer of an issue though. You can only filter by the name in this way. I believe the underlying endpoint has not implemented the email address filtering so even if you use 

 

 

organizer/emailAddress/address eq 'organizer.email@address.com'

 

 

It will unfortunately not work for Email due to filter not being implemented and this may explain why the above will end up actually returning InternalServerError in Power Automate - so instead, only this query will work and you must use the Name instead only (which also happens to be mentioned in the link as well):

 

 

 

organizer/emailAddress/name eq 'My Events'

 

 

This one works correctly for 'name' whereas the one for 'address' does not work, for the reason specified above..

 

Currently, I don't have another idea if you have to use Email other than to resort to a workaround like the one posted by @ccc333ab  of just getting the whole thing and filtering it. I do believe that in some cases, that specific workaround may only work if the sample size is small enough, so depending on your scenario, you might need to just resort to filtering by name rather than email address in the OData Query as I am suggesting here:

 

 

organizer/emailAddress/name eq 'My Events'

 

 

if you need a solution involving the OData Filter specifically.

 

I do understand this may not be ideal to filter by the name and not the email address - however, the filtering of email address in that specific way might unfortunately not be supported right now.

 

 

You also mentioned that this worked:

@equals(triggerBody()?['organizer'],'someEmailAddress@onmicrosoft.com')

The reason for that is, since the Trigger is not a Filter OData Query, this uses the abstraction, and would use the object as you saw it returned in Power Automate JSON, and not the underlying one. The underlying one is only applicable in the OData queries specifically.

 

Check if this helps explain it.

 

@poweractivate- Thank you for the in-depth reply. So much more to learn. Great 'Super User' explanation! I will be looking into your review links tomorrow. I must admit I do need to figure out the 'name' of the 'organizer' as this mailbox is generated by Bookings but I am sure it can be done.

Helpful resources

Announcements

Calling all User Group Leaders and Super Users! Mark Your Calendars for the next Community Ambassador Call on May 9th!

This month's Community Ambassador call is on May 9th at 9a & 3p PDT. Please keep an eye out in your private messages and Teams channels for your invitation. There are lots of exciting updates coming to the Community, and we have some exclusive opportunities to share with you! As always, we'll also review regular updates for User Groups, Super Users, and share general information about what's going on in the Community.     Be sure to register & we hope to see all of you there!

April 2024 Community Newsletter

We're pleased to share the April Community Newsletter, where we highlight the latest news, product releases, upcoming events, and the amazing work of our outstanding Community members.   If you're new to the Community, please make sure to follow the latest News & Announcements and check out the Community on LinkedIn as well! It's the best way to stay up-to-date with all the news from across Microsoft Power Platform and beyond.    COMMUNITY HIGHLIGHTS   Check out the most active community members of the last month! These hardworking members are posting regularly, answering questions, kudos, and providing top solutions in their communities. We are so thankful for each of you--keep up the great work! If you hope to see your name here next month, follow these awesome community members to see what they do!   Power AppsPower AutomateCopilot StudioPower PagesWarrenBelzDeenujialexander2523ragavanrajanLaurensMManishSolankiMattJimisonLucas001AmikcapuanodanilostephenrobertOliverRodriguestimlAndrewJManikandanSFubarmmbr1606VishnuReddy1997theMacResolutionsVishalJhaveriVictorIvanidzejsrandhawahagrua33ikExpiscornovusFGuerrero1PowerAddictgulshankhuranaANBExpiscornovusprathyooSpongYeNived_Nambiardeeksha15795apangelesGochixgrantjenkinsvasu24Mfon   LATEST NEWS   Business Applications Launch Event - On Demand In case you missed the Business Applications Launch Event, you can now catch up on all the announcements and watch the entire event on-demand inside Charles Lamanna's latest cloud blog.   This is your one stop shop for all the latest Copilot features across Power Platform and #Dynamics365, including first-hand looks at how companies such as Lenovo, Sonepar, Ford Motor Company, Omnicom and more are using these new capabilities in transformative ways. Click the image below to watch today!   Power Platform Community Conference 2024 is here! It's time to look forward to the next installment of the Power Platform Community Conference, which takes place this year on 18-20th September 2024 at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas!   Come and be inspired by Microsoft senior thought leaders and the engineers behind the #PowerPlatform, with Charles Lamanna, Sangya Singh, Ryan Cunningham, Kim Manis, Nirav Shah, Omar Aftab and Leon Welicki already confirmed to speak. You'll also be able to learn from industry experts and Microsoft MVPs who are dedicated to bridging the gap between humanity and technology. These include the likes of Lisa Crosbie, Victor Dantas, Kristine Kolodziejski, David Yack, Daniel Christian, Miguel Félix, and Mats Necker, with many more to be announced over the coming weeks.   Click here to watch our brand-new sizzle reel for #PPCC24 or click the image below to find out more about registration. See you in Vegas!       Power Up Program Announces New Video-Based Learning Hear from Principal Program Manager, Dimpi Gandhi, to discover the latest enhancements to the Microsoft #PowerUpProgram. These include a new accelerated video-based curriculum crafted with the expertise of Microsoft MVPs, Rory Neary and Charlie Phipps-Bennett. If you’d like to hear what’s coming next, click the image below to find out more!   UPCOMING EVENTS Microsoft Build - Seattle and Online - 21-23rd May 2024 Taking place on 21-23rd May 2024 both online and in Seattle, this is the perfect event to learn more about low code development, creating copilots, cloud platforms, and so much more to help you unleash the power of AI.   There's a serious wealth of talent speaking across the three days, including the likes of Satya Nadella, Amanda K. Silver, Scott Guthrie, Sarah Bird, Charles Lamanna, Miti J., Kevin Scott, Asha Sharma, Rajesh Jha, Arun Ulag, Clay Wesener, and many more.   And don't worry if you can't make it to Seattle, the event will be online and totally free to join. Click the image below to register for #MSBuild today!   European Collab Summit - Germany - 14-16th May 2024 The clock is counting down to the amazing European Collaboration Summit, which takes place in Germany May 14-16, 2024. #CollabSummit2024 is designed to provide cutting-edge insights and best practices into Power Platform, Microsoft 365, Teams, Viva, and so much more. There's a whole host of experts speakers across the three-day event, including the likes of Vesa Juvonen, Laurie Pottmeyer, Dan Holme, Mark Kashman, Dona Sarkar, Gavin Barron, Emily Mancini, Martina Grom, Ahmad Najjar, Liz Sundet, Nikki Chapple, Sara Fennah, Seb Matthews, Tobias Martin, Zoe Wilson, Fabian Williams, and many more.   Click the image below to find out more about #ECS2024 and register today!     Microsoft 365 & Power Platform Conference - Seattle - 3-7th June If you're looking to turbo boost your Power Platform skills this year, why not take a look at everything TechCon365 has to offer at the Seattle Convention Center on June 3-7, 2024.   This amazing 3-day conference (with 2 optional days of workshops) offers over 130 sessions across multiple tracks, alongside 25 workshops presented by Power Platform, Microsoft 365, Microsoft Teams, Viva, Azure, Copilot and AI experts. There's a great array of speakers, including the likes of Nirav Shah, Naomi Moneypenny, Jason Himmelstein, Heather Cook, Karuana Gatimu, Mark Kashman, Michelle Gilbert, Taiki Y., Kristi K., Nate Chamberlain, Julie Koesmarno, Daniel Glenn, Sarah Haase, Marc Windle, Amit Vasu, Joanne C Klein, Agnes Molnar, and many more.   Click the image below for more #Techcon365 intel and register today!     For more events, click the image below to visit the Microsoft Community Days website.      

Tuesday Tip | Update Your Community Profile Today!

It's time for another 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.   We're excited to announce that updating your community profile has never been easier! Keeping your profile up to date is essential for staying connected and engaged with the community.   Check out the following Support Articles with these topics: Accessing Your Community ProfileRetrieving Your Profile URLUpdating Your Community Profile Time ZoneChanging Your Community Profile Picture (Avatar)Setting Your Date Display Preferences Click on your community link for more information: Power Apps, Power Automate, Power Pages, Copilot Studio   Thank you for being an active part of our community. Your contributions make a difference! Best Regards, The Community Management Team

Hear what's next for the Power Up Program

Hear from Principal Program Manager, Dimpi Gandhi, to discover the latest enhancements to the Microsoft #PowerUpProgram, including a new accelerated video-based curriculum crafted with the expertise of Microsoft MVPs, Rory Neary and Charlie Phipps-Bennett. If you’d like to hear what’s coming next, click the link below to sign up today! https://aka.ms/PowerUp  

Super User of the Month | Ahmed Salih

We're thrilled to announce that Ahmed Salih is our Super User of the Month for April 2024. Ahmed has been one of our most active Super Users this year--in fact, he kicked off the year in our Community with this great video reminder of why being a Super User has been so important to him!   Ahmed is the Senior Power Platform Architect at Saint Jude's Children's Research Hospital in Memphis. He's been a Super User for two seasons and is also a Microsoft MVP! He's celebrating his 3rd year being active in the Community--and he's received more than 500 kudos while authoring nearly 300 solutions. Ahmed's contributions to the Super User in Training program has been invaluable, with his most recent session with SUIT highlighting an incredible amount of best practices and tips that have helped him achieve his success.   Ahmed's infectious enthusiasm and boundless energy are a key reason why so many Community members appreciate how he brings his personality--and expertise--to every interaction. With all the solutions he provides, his willingness to help the Community learn more about Power Platform, and his sheer joy in life, we are pleased to celebrate Ahmed and all his contributions! You can find him in the Community and on LinkedIn. Congratulations, Ahmed--thank you for being a SUPER user!

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)

Users online (3,926)