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Low-Code Application Development with Appian

You're reading from   Low-Code Application Development with Appian The practitioner's guide to high-speed business automation at enterprise scale using Appian

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800205628
Length 462 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Stefan Helzle Stefan Helzle
Author Profile Icon Stefan Helzle
Stefan Helzle
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: No-Code with Appian Quick Apps
2. Chapter 1: Creating an Appian Quick App FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Features and Limitations of Appian Quick Apps 4. Chapter 3: Building Blocks of Appian Quick Apps 5. Chapter 4: The Use Cases for Appian Quick Apps 6. Section 2: A Software Project with Appian 7. Chapter 5: Understanding the Business Context 8. Chapter 6: Understanding Business Data in Appian Projects 9. Chapter 7: Understanding Business Processes in Appian Projects 10. Chapter 8: Understanding UX Discovery and the UI in Appian Projects 11. Section 3: Implementing Software
12. Chapter 9: Modeling Business Data with Appian Records 13. Chapter 10: Modeling Business Processes in Appian 14. Chapter 11: Creating User Interfaces in Appian 15. Chapter 12: Task Management with Appian 16. Chapter 13: Reporting and Monitoring with Appian 17. Section 4: The Code in Appian Low-Code
18. Chapter 14: Expressing Logic with Appian 19. Chapter 15: Using Web Services with Appian Integrations 20. Chapter 16: Useful Implementation Patterns in Appian 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Process patterns

Patterns for process design are a bit more concrete than solution patterns and describe how to implement common requirements.

Creating process chains

If you think of an end-to-end business process, you might get the idea of implementing it the same way in Appian. So, you create one main process model, which then utilizes multiple sub-processes. This is a great idea when drawing process models for humans, but a bad idea when implementing a process model to be executed in software.

In Appian, this main model would stay active and cannot be updated until it is completed. So, any change in higher-level logic becomes complicated. Instead of this human-oriented pattern, do not implement the main process at all, but create a chain of process phases in which each phase decides about the next phase to be started. This way, there is no long-lived process instance, and updates to the parent logic are much easier.

Keep these individual process models simple and self...

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