Working with Power Automate: Managing Large Flows

Power AutomateThis article is part of the Working with Power Automate series I am writing on my experiences working with the Power Automate, which is part of the Power Platform from Microsoft. I also have a related series of articles on Power Automate with Microsoft Dynamics 365 BC.

While you can build a flow with as many steps as required, they will, in my experience, become more and more unwieldy the larger they become. This means the flow is both hard to navigate and difficult to maintain as you need to do a lot of scrolling and hold the structure in your mind.

There are two ways that you can make flows easier to understand and manage.

The first is through using scopes, which allows you to group steps together into logical groupings.

However, this does have it’s limitations as the steps within the workflow are still contained within the same flow, meaning you still have the same number of steps within the flow.

The second approach, and the one which I’d say forms part of the ALM (application lifecycle management) is child flows. As well as allowing you to break a flow down into multiple smaller flows, making them easier to understand and maintain, the individual child flows also become reusable so you can use them again and again without needing to create the same set of steps within every flow.

Over the next few articles of this series, I’ll run through scopes and child flows with some further explanation and examples.

Working with Power Automate

Working with Power Automate
What is Power Automate?
What Type of Flow Are Available?
What Type of Cloud Flows Are Available?
Power Automate with Business Central
Working with Power Automate Solutions: What Are Solutions?
Working with Power Automate Solutions: What Types of Solution Are There?
Working with Power Automate Solutions: What is a Solution Publisher?
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Create a Solution Publisher
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Create a Solution
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Publish a Solution
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Version Numbering for Solutions
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Exporting An Unmanaged Solution
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Importing An Unmanaged Solution
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Exporting A Managed Solution
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Importing A Managed Solution
Working with Power Automate Solutions: Change the Managed Properties of a Solution Component
Create a Visio Diagram of a Flow
What Are Environment Variables and Why Should They be Used?
Create an Environment Variable
Create a New Cloud Flow From a Template
Managing Large Flows
What is a Scope?
Example of How to Use a Scope
Best Practice For Using Scopes
Working with Power Automate Child Flows: What are Child Flows?
Working with Power Automate Child Flows: Create a Child Flow
Working with Power Automate Child Flows: Change Run Only Users For Child Flow
Working with Power Automate Child Flows: Add a Child Flow To a Parent Flow
Working with Power Automate Child Flows: Test the Parent/Child Flow Examples
Working with Power Automate Child Flows: Error Encountered Saving a Flow Which Calls a Child Flow
Working with Power Automate Child Flows: Error Encountered With Surprise Extra Parameters for a Child Flow

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