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Screen control in Power Apps

A UI element that contains one or more other controls in an app.

Description

Most apps have multiple Screen controls that contain Label controls, Button controls, and other controls that show data and support navigation. For information about how to add a screen, reorder screens, and configure navigation, review Add a screen.

Key properties

BackgroundImage – The name of an image file that appears in the background of a screen.

Fill – The background color of a control.

Additional properties

Height - The height of the screen. If the app is responsive (Scale to fit is Off) and the device on which the app is running is shorter than this property, the screen can scroll vertically.

ImagePosition – The position (Fill, Fit, Stretch, Tile, or Center) of an image in a screen or a control if it isn't the same size as the image.

LoadingSpinner (None, Controls or Data) - When None, spinner will not be shown. When Controls | Data, will show spinner until all child controls at the screen level are visible. Note. Nested controls are not considered.

LoadingSpinnerColor - The fill color of the loading spinner.

Name - The name of the screen.

OnHidden – The behavior of an app when the user navigates away from a screen.

OnVisible – The behavior of an app when the user navigates to a screen. Use this property to set up variables and preload data used by the screen. Use the App.OnStart property for set up once when the app is started.

Orientation - The orientation of the screen. If its Width is greater than its Height, the orientation will be Layout.Horizontal; otherwise, it will be Layout.Vertical.

Size - A positive integer that classifies the size of the screen. The classification is determined by comparing the screen's Width property to the values in the App.SizeBreakpoints property. The ScreenSize type consists of four values (Small, Medium, Large, and ExtraLarge) that correspond to the integers 1 through 4.

Width - The width of the screen. If the app is responsive (Scale to fit is Off) and the device on which the app is running is narrower than this property, the screen can scroll horizontally.

Distinct( DataSource, ColumnName )

Example

  1. Add a Radio control, name it ScreenFills, and set its Items property to this value:

    ["Red", "Green"]

    Don't know how to add, name, and configure a control?

  2. Name the default Screen control Source, add another Screen control, and name it Target.

  3. In Source, add a Shape control (such as an arrow), and set its OnSelect property to this formula:

    Navigate(Target, ScreenTransition.Fade)

    Want more information about the Navigate function or other functions?

  4. In Target, add a Shape control (such as an arrow), and set its OnSelect property to this formula:

    Navigate(Source, ScreenTransition.Fade)

  5. Set the Fill property of Target to this formula:

    If("Red" in ScreenFills.Selected.Value, RGBA(255, 0, 0, 1), RGBA(54, 176, 75, 1))

  6. Select the Source screen and then, while holding down the Alt key, select either option in the Radio control, and then select the Shape control.

    Target appears in the color that you selected.

  7. In Target, select the Shape control to return to Source.

  8. (optional) Select the other option in the Radio control, and then select the Shape control to confirm that Target appears in the other color.

  9. (optional) Reorder the screens by hovering over Target in the left navigation bar, selecting the ellipsis that appears, and then selecting Move up.

    Target appears first when the user opens the app.

Accessibility guidelines

Color contrast

When the Screen is the effective background for text, there must be adequate color contrast between:

For example, if a Screen contains a Label and the label has transparent fill, then the screen's Fill effectively becomes the background color for the label.

In addition to text, consider checking color contrast with essential graphical objects like the star images in a Rating control.

Screen reader support

  • There must be a meaningful name for each Screen. The screen name can be viewed and edited in the same way as other controls: in the tree view of the controls pane or in the header of the properties pane.

    Note

    When a new Screen is loaded, screen readers will announce its name.