![]() Power Apps Community Power Automate Community Power Virtual Agents Community Power Pages Community On this special episode of Power Platform Connections, David Warner and Hugo Bernier interview Microsoft Business Applications MVPs Geetha Sivasailam & Chris Piasecki live in Redmond, alongside the latest news, videos, product updates, and community blogs. Next, can you describe this part of your statement - " the field will not return to blank" ? So now, I am trying to break down what you have said:įirst - If you want to be able to "blank" out a column in your list, you need to make sure that the Error-level formula management feature is turned on in your app settings. The second, it is best to have only one "real" formula to determine a "state", in this case visible already determines the state, so we can just use it in the Required as reference rather than repeating the formula. That is a deprecated property and should not be used. The first one, Visible, you were using SelectedText. I even tried a formula for that.no go.Īnymore ideas or is it obvious what I'm not that it is related to your issue, but change your Visible and Required properties for the SpeakerName datacard to: No matter what I do, once I add a value into the dcvEventSpeakerName, the field will not return to blank OR clear my Sharepoint column - the name just stays. Then I have my Text Input dcEventSpeakerName If I choose yes, I get yes in my list and yes is still on my form when I return to it. A Text box in my Sharepoint list which I set up as you suggested in paragraphs 1 & 2 that has given me a Yes/No drop down in my form entitled DDGuestSpeakerYN. No matter what I do, my text input is not resetting.ġ. ![]() Randy, I started with a clean slate - and I'm still having challenges. So, the reality is - yes it is easy - with the above, you have:Ģ) Added a table to the AllowedValues propertyģ) Added a formula in the Visible of the datacardsĤ) Added a formula in the Reset of the it is easy! Yes, what you mention is easy to make happen in the form.Ĥ) Added a formula in the Reset of the controls Then set the Reset property of those controls to: = "No" If you want the controls in those datacards to reset when No is selected. Then they will be visible when Yes is selected and No when it is not. So, let's say you have a dropdown called DataCardValue1 and you have other datacards that should be visible when the dropdown value is "Yes", then simply set the Visible properties of those datacards to : = "Yes" ![]() Now, as for the other cards/fields on your form, their visible property should be based off of this dropdown control you have in your datacard. So, for most trying to grasp PowerApps, the Dropdown is far easier to set its value than the Combobox. ![]() In that property you can put and you are done! All the rest is done for you.īUT - I got the impression from your first post that the column was a yes/no column, so the approach is different for that.Ī combobox is overly complex in this situation because comboboxes are table/record based. Once you change to Edit Allowed Values (and by the way, you cannot change the control type once you unlock the card), your datacard will now have an AllowedValue property. PowerApps will automatically replace the input control with a Dropdown and it will connect all of the pieces you need to make sure that it updates properly and shows its underlying value properly. When you add your text based field to your form, all you need to do is set the control type of the field to "Edit Allowed Values". It is easy! Yes, what you mention is easy to make happen in the form.
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