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However, if you are deleting hundreds of tasks a day as I am, this could save hours of your life from such drudgery. It is all a bit clunky, hence the need for a proper feature. That way, if new tasks come in they will not add new frames and confuse the macro. In order to prevent this, first set your task filter to only select items from a single column of your view (e.g. The Microsoft To-Do application helps you organize and streamline your activities, whether it is for work, school, or home. There are two caveats:ġ) After you record the macro, before saving, you have to delete the line that reloads the Microsoft Teams web page.Ģ) This tool can be dangerous, whereby if new tasks come in and change your view, you could automate deleting the wrong tasks. Use the following expression to get Etag.

The fill the access-token we have got in Compose. Use List tasks to get tasks, you could use Filter array or condition to filter tasks. If you have got the access-token, then we could configure Flow to delete the task. Using a free Chrome browser tool for GUI automation, iMacros, you can record yourself deleting one task at the top of a column, then loop and play the macro and delete 99 tasks at a time in a few seconds. First, we need to get access-token from Graph explorer. We create and delete hundreds of tasks per day. Step 2: Find your deleted task and right-click on it. I have a workaround for this really important need of a bulk delete feature. Step 1: In Outlook, go to email folder list and expand the Deleted Items folder.
