Power Apps introduces the new ‘Create a Formula’ feature, making it easier than ever to build and edit Power Fx formulas. Plus, now you can explain partial formulas too!
GA of calling stored procedures directly in Power Fx. Speed up app development. Speeds up Power App performance.
AI models are improving rapidly, and customers need effective tools to integrate AI into their business solutions that provide precise, reliable and consistent information, and are easy to deploy. Today we are happy to announce our latest improvements to help makers integrate AI into their low-code apps and solutions.
We are making a small syntax change to how column names are specified in AddColumns, DropColumns, ShowColumns, RenameColumns, Search, GroupBy, Ungroup, and DataSourceInfo functions. Today they need to be wrapped in double quotes as a text string, but tomorrow they will not.
March update to modern controls in canvas apps, including a new control, table enhancements and updates to authoring in Power Apps.
February update to modern controls in canvas apps, including a new control, table enhancements and updates to authoring in Power Apps.
Calling stored procedures directly in Power Fx. Speed up app development. Speeds up Power App performance.
Power Apps secure implicit connections now generally available.
We are pleased to announce the general availability of open-source Power Fx 1.0. “1.0” means that the language definition is now stable and breaking changes will be managed and communicated. It is now ready for you to integrate in your production work loads. It will be coming to Power Apps later this year.
We are excited to announce that several key delegation improvements will roll out this month that should improve your app’s performance and correctness and significantly reduce formula authoring confusion.
We’re pleased to announce some exciting updates to how makers can use untyped objects. ParseJSON() and untyped objects are very flexible, but we’ve heard your feedback that improvements are needed to require less code and make untyped objects easier to use. So today’s announcement is all about implicit type conversion, or coercion.