![]() We’ll create a few more Azure functions to take care of this functionality. In this article that is the continuation of the last article, we’ll learn how to take that credit card application request and put that into a Queue function and then into the Blob storage. The case study that we took was an end user making a credit card application and our function acknowledging it by just returning a dummy text with applicant’s name saying “Hi XYZ, your application is accepted”. We also explored how to debug the Azure function in a local development environment and not only this we also explored how to debug a pre-compiled deployed Azure Function on the Azure portal in Visual Studio. We tested the functions locally in Visual Studio 2017 and then published the function to Azure and tested the published function via Postman. In the last article of learning Azure Functions, we learned about creating an Azure account, and setting up a development environment to write HTTP triggered Azure Functions.
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