Build a My Requests view
Learn how to use Power Apps Build a My Requests view with practical Power Apps guidance, implementation steps, common mistakes, troubleshooting, and related BuilderVault patterns.
What this pattern solves
Power Apps Build a My Requests view is a practical BuilderVault pattern for makers and developers who need a repeatable way to handle build a my requests view inside a real Microsoft business app. The goal is to move past trial-and-error and give the builder a clear structure they can adapt to their own screens, flows, lists, tables, or environments.
Use this page when you are deciding how the pattern should work, what supporting data or permissions are needed, and what should happen when the happy path fails. The notes below focus on implementation fit, common mistakes, troubleshooting, and internal links to adjacent patterns so the build stays consistent.
Search intent
Help a Power Platform builder understand when to use Power Apps Build a My Requests view, how to implement it, and what mistakes to avoid before using it in a production business app.
Problem
Teams often rebuild this delegation-safe filtering solution from scratch, which creates inconsistent behavior and avoidable support issues.
What the finished pattern should include
- A maker can explain the control, formula, validation, and save behavior before release.
- The app gives users clear feedback for successful saves, missing values, and failed updates.
- The pattern can be handed to another builder without relying on hidden assumptions.
Solution
// Build a My Requests view
// Use on the primary Save, Submit, or action button.
Set(varSaving, true);
Set(varErrorMessage, Blank());
If(
IsBlank(txtTitle.Text),
Notify("Enter the required title before saving.", NotificationType.Warning),
IfError(
Patch(
Requests,
Coalesce(varSelectedRequest, Defaults(Requests)),
{
Title: txtTitle.Text,
Status: { Value: ddStatus.Selected.Value },
OwnerEmail: User().Email,
PatternType: "Delegation-safe filtering",
LastAction: "Build a My Requests view"
}
),
Set(varErrorMessage, FirstError.Message);
Notify("The record could not be saved: " & varErrorMessage, NotificationType.Error),
Notify("Saved successfully.", NotificationType.Success)
)
);
Set(varSaving, false);Implementation checklist
- Confirm the Power Apps scenario and the business user this pattern supports.
- Identify the data source, owner, security model, and exception path before building.
- Build the smallest reusable version first, then add optional branches or polish.
- Test with realistic data, permissions, edge cases, and handoff expectations.
- Link this pattern to its collection, topic hub, and related implementation patterns.
Step-by-step instructions
- Add the controls, variables, and data source references needed for Build a My Requests view.
- Validate required fields before running Patch, Collect, or SubmitForm logic.
- Wrap the save behavior in IfError so users see success and failure feedback.
- Test with a new record, an existing record, blank optional values, and a failed connector call.
When to use
- Use when building delegation-safe filtering capabilities in Power Apps.
- Use when the team needs a repeatable implementation pattern instead of one-off notes.
- Use when supportability, clear ownership, and business-readable behavior matter.
When not to use
- Avoid when the process is still too undefined to standardize.
- Avoid when tenant policy, compliance, or licensing requires a different approved architecture.
Common mistakes
- Building the pattern before naming the owner and lifecycle.
- Using display labels where stable IDs, internal names, or structured fields are needed.
- Skipping error, empty-state, or exception handling until after launch.
Troubleshooting
- If results look inconsistent, inspect the source data shape and compare it to the fields used by the pattern.
- If users are confused, simplify the status labels, ownership fields, or action text before adding more automation.
FAQ
When should I use Power Apps Build a My Requests view?
Use Power Apps Build a My Requests view when the same Power Apps scenario is likely to appear in more than one app, flow, list, table, or environment and needs a repeatable implementation approach.
Does this pattern work with Power Apps, SharePoint?
Yes. This pattern is written for Power Apps, SharePoint scenarios, but you should still confirm connectors, licensing, permissions, delegation limits, and environment rules before using it in production.
What usually causes this Power Apps pattern to fail?
The most common failure points are unclear ownership, missing validation, weak exception handling, undocumented permissions, and testing only the happy path.
Is Power Apps Build a My Requests view beginner friendly?
This pattern is rated Beginner. Beginners can use the fit guidance and checklist first, while experienced builders can move directly into the formula, flow, schema, or governance details.
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