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Microsoft Power Apps provides a drag and drop interface, underpinned by a rich set of formulas, for generating mobile and tablet apps that are connected to data. The CData API Server extends Power Apps with connectivity to remote data sources, without a need to maintain a separate copy of the data in the Power Apps Common Data Service. The CData API Server provides database-like connectivity for Google Sheets, augmenting the functionality of SaaS APIs and NoSQL databases with an in-memory SQL-92 engine.
The CData API Server also supports the Swagger metadata standard, whose UI-generation and code-generation possibilities are utilized across Azure App Service, Power Automate, and Power Apps. With Swagger, Power Apps generates a complete set of formulas for working with Google Sheets -- this article shows how to use these formulas to connect your PowerApp to remote Google Sheets data.
If you have not already done so, download the CData API Server. Once you have installed the API Server, follow the steps below to begin producing secure Google Sheets OData services:
To work with Google Sheets data from Microsoft Power Apps, we start by creating and configuring a Google Sheets connection. Follow the steps below to configure the API Server to connect to Google Sheets data:
You can connect to a spreadsheet by providing authentication to Google and then setting the Spreadsheet connection property to the name or feed link of the spreadsheet. If you want to view a list of information about the spreadsheets in your Google Drive, execute a query to the Spreadsheets view after you authenticate.
ClientLogin (username/password authentication) has been officially deprecated since April 20, 2012 and is now no longer available. Instead, use the OAuth 2.0 authentication standard. To access Google APIs on behalf on individual users, you can use the embedded credentials or you can register your own OAuth app.
OAuth also enables you to use a service account to connect on behalf of users in a Google Apps domain. To authenticate with a service account, register an application to obtain the OAuth JWT values.
See the Getting Started chapter in the help documentation to connect to Google Sheets from different types of accounts: Google accounts, Google Apps accounts, and accounts using two-step verification.
π Connecting to a datasource (SQLite is shown)
Next, create a user to access your Google Sheets data through the API Server. You can add and configure users on the Users page. Follow the steps below to configure and create a user:
Having created a user, you are ready to create API endpoints for the Google Sheets tables:
Having configured a connection to Google Sheets data, created a user, and added resources to the API Server, you now have an easily accessible REST API based on the OData protocol for those resources. From the API page in API Server, you can view and copy the API Endpoints for the API:
π API EndpointsYou will use the metadata to create a Custom API connection. You can obtain the Swagger definition by making the following request in your browser and then saving the resulting JSON file:
http://MySite:MyPort/api.rsc/$oas?version=2
The following procedure shows how to create a simple app that searches remote Google Sheets data.
Follow the steps below to connect to Google Sheets from a Power App:
Follow the steps below to create a simple app that can search Google Sheets data. You will use Power Apps formulas to bind Google Sheets rows to rows in a gallery control.
In the View tab, click Gallery -> Vertical to add a Gallery.
After selecting a gallery, assign the Items property of the gallery to Google Sheets data on the Advanced tab of the gallery settings. The formula below will allow you to access columns in the Orders table.
ForAll(CDataSwaggerAPI.getAllOrders().value, {myShipcountry: Shipcountry, myOrderPrice: OrderPrice})
Assign Google Sheets columns to UI elements by clicking the element and then setting the Text property (on the Advanced tab of the UI element) to ThisItem.myShipcountry or ThisItem.myOrderPrice.
π Adding the connection to the layout.To filter the records displayed by the gallery, add a TextInput to your Screen, clear the Text property for the TextInput, and set the Items property of the gallery to a formula like the one below, replacing TextInput1 with the name of the TextInput control in your gallery, if necessary:
If(IsBlank(TextInput1.Text),
ForAll(CDataSwaggerAPI.getAllOrders().value, {myShipcountry: Shipcountry, myOrderPrice: OrderPrice}),
ForAll(CDataSwaggerAPI.getAllOrders({'$filter':Concatenate("contains(Shipcountry,",TextInput1.Text,")")}).value, {myShipcountry: Shipcountry, myOrderPrice: OrderPrice}))
The formula builds an OData query that the API Server executes against the remote Google Sheets data, ensuring that the search is run against the current data without first pulling in every record into the app. You can find more information on the supported OData in the API Server help documentation.
Follow the steps below to load an editable screen that shows the fields of the Google Sheets record selected in the gallery.
Navigate( Details, None )
For each column you will need to do the following. Note that for Custom APIs form elements cannot detect which requests need to be formulated to the API Server, so you will need to write the data modification formulas manually.
To give your app basic update functionality and navigation, add Submit and Back buttons:
CDataSwaggerAPI.updateOrders(BrowseGallery.Selected.myId,BrowseGallery.Selected.myId,{Shipcountry:TextInput1.Text,OrderPrice:TextInput2.Text})
Navigate( BrowseScreen, None )
Your mobile or tablet app can now browse, search, and update Google Sheets data.
Learn more or sign up for a free trial:
CData API Server