@@Enea I observed it different in one of my project. I was reading pdf files using AI builder (reading table from them) and storing the result like (adding a row into a table). When I used, Apply for each, it was just mixing the rows from different pdfs table, and when I used For each, it literally consider one document at a time, extract all rows from it and add all rows in excel table and then move to next pdf. The problem is now I forgot like from where I took For each in Power Automate.
Hi. What is the difference between "For each" and "Apply for each"? And from where we can get this "For each" option?
Its the same mate
@@Enea I observed it different in one of my project. I was reading pdf files using AI builder (reading table from them) and storing the result like (adding a row into a table). When I used, Apply for each, it was just mixing the rows from different pdfs table, and when I used For each, it literally consider one document at a time, extract all rows from it and add all rows in excel table and then move to next pdf.
The problem is now I forgot like from where I took For each in Power Automate.