Create Conversation activity

An activity that creates a new conversation with Microsoft Azure Bot Service.


Create Conversation activity

Configure the Create Conversation activity

To configure the Create Conversation activity, do the procedure in this topic.

Examples

Prerequisites

Good to Know

How to Start

  1. Open Process Builder.

    For information about how to open this screen, refer to Process Builder.


    Open Process Builder
  2. In Process Builder, in the Activity Library open the MS Azure Bot Service tab.

    Open MS Azure Bot Service tab
  3. On the MS Azure Bot Service tab, drag the Create Conversation activity onto your process.

    Drag Create Conversation activity

General Configuration

Specifies the basic settings for the Create Conversation activity.

Figure: General Configuration screen

General Configuration screen

Good to Know

  • Documentation for this screen is provided for completeness. The fields are mostly self-explanatory.

Fields

Field NameDefinition

Display Name

Function:
Specifies the activity name that shows in your process.
Accepted Values:
One line of text that can have spaces.
Default Value:
None
Accepts Process Data Variables:
No
Example:
This is a common configuration field that is used in many examples. Refer to:
  • Examples - Step-by-step use case examples, information about what types of examples are provided in the AgilePoint NX Product Documentation, and other resources where you can find more examples.

Description

Function:
Specifies an optional text description for your activity.
Accepted Values:
More than one line of text.
Default Value:
None
Accepts Process Data Variables:
No

Create Conversation Configuration

Specifies the information to create a conversation in a channel.

Figure: Create Conversation Configuration screen

Create Conversation Configuration screen

Fields

Field NameDefinition

MS Azure Bot Service

Function:
Specifies the access token that connects to your Microsoft Azure Bot Service.
Accepted Values:
A list of access tokens configured for your environment.
Default Value:
None
Accepts Process Data Variables:
No
Example:

Create Add Token icon

Opens this Screen:
Access Token for Microsoft Azure Bot Service
Function of this Screen:
Configure an access token to connect to Microsoft Azure Bot Service.
Example:

Service URL

Function:
Specifies the URL for your bot.
Accepted Values:
A valid bot URL.
Default Value:
None
Accepts Process Data Variables:
Yes
Limitations:

Some information about third-party integrations is outside the scope of the AgilePoint NX Product Documentation. It is the responsibility of the vendors who create and maintain these technologies to provide this information. This includes specific business use cases and examples; explanations for third-party concepts; details about the data models and input and output data formats for third-party technologies; and various types of IDs, URL patterns, connection string formats, or other technical information that is specific to the third-party technologies. For more information, refer to Where Can I Find Information and Examples for Third-Party Integrations?

Request Mapping

Function:
Connects the bot API request parameter to your process schema. This is mandatory only if the request passes data from the process schema to parameters in the bot API.
Accepted Values:
Click the Schema Mapping Schema Mapping icon button to open the Schema Mapper.

Use this screen to connect the request to the data model for your process.

Default Value:
None
Example:
Refer to:

Store Conversation ID in this Variable

Function:
Specifies a process data variable that stores the conversation ID from Microsoft Azure Bot Service.
Accepted Values:
A process data variable that accepts an alphanumeric string with no spaces or special characters.
Default Value:
None
Accepts Process Data Variables:
Yes
Limitations:

Some information about third-party integrations is outside the scope of the AgilePoint NX Product Documentation. It is the responsibility of the vendors who create and maintain these technologies to provide this information. This includes specific business use cases and examples; explanations for third-party concepts; details about the data models and input and output data formats for third-party technologies; and various types of IDs, URL patterns, connection string formats, or other technical information that is specific to the third-party technologies. For more information, refer to Where Can I Find Information and Examples for Third-Party Integrations?