Nov 21, 2022
Camunda Platform 8 for .NET Developers
In this tutorial, learn how you can take advantage of Camunda for powerful process orchestration as a .NET developer.
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All Camunda blog posts tagged with Camunda Platform 8.
Nov 21, 2022
In this tutorial, learn how you can take advantage of Camunda for powerful process orchestration as a .NET developer.
Nov 17, 2022
New Camunda Connectors can boost your process orchestration productivity by connecting to popular productivity and communication tools.
By Amy Johnston
Nov 14, 2022
You can now take advantage of development clusters on our professional plan to test your models quickly outside of production.
By Danny Shain
Nov 4, 2022
Learn how to build a Camunda Platform 8 Connector. Quickly start building your own custom Connectors using Camunda today.
By Josh Wulf
Oct 28, 2022
We’re grateful to our customers and community for selecting Camunda Platform for three 2022 PeerSpot Peer Awards.
By Danny Shain
Oct 26, 2022
Learn how inbound Connectors work in Camunda Platform 8.1, and how you can get started with them today.
Oct 11, 2022
Updates to Web Modeler, Connectors, Zeebe, Operate, Optimize, & more.
Oct 11, 2022
Eliminate islands of automation by orchestrating processes from end to end.
By Shane Ernest
Sep 30, 2022
What is FEEL As a part of the Decision Model and Notation (DMN) specification, the OMG also defined the Friendly Enough Expression Language (FEEL). Since DMN is intended to be used by designers and business analysts who would like to build decision tables, FEEL needed to be designed as an uncomplicated and human-readable expression language that would help readers understand the logic being described or executed by the DMN table. Expression languages are typically used by developers to evaluate data to produce a result based on query parameters or conditions. This means it’s syntactically closer to code than human-readable sentences. Since one of the goals of FEEL is to be “process analyst friendly,” it prioritizes readability more than other expression…
By Niall Deehan