At this point, you can save your flow, run it, and go to the library and see the new file there. Those other fields, I blurred out because they are irrelevant to this demo. This step puts the metadata on that new file you created. For the file’s Title, I went ahead and used the Customer parameter there as well. For the Customer, Hours, and TaxID, I used the 3 input parameters respectively. For the ID, I picked the ItemID from Create File.
For the File Name, I’m using the Customer from the manual input parameters. I just create mine right there in the same library, but of course, you could put it in a different library.
In my example, I’m adding these text columns: Customer, Hours, TaxID Create a document library in SharePoint, and add new columns in the library, for each piece of information that you’d like to insert into your documents.This post is really just showing a way that they can be used in conjunction with Flow.
They’ve been around since SharePoint / Office 2010. What does that title mean? Translation: Create a Microsoft Flow that will let people fill out a form and place the field values in specific spots of a Word document, so that it looks like a filled-out legal document (or any kind of document).