Power Automate Desktop (PAD). UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026

how to use the Get details of a UI element action to read a button enabled state before clicking

By Sai Kiran Pandrala · Last verified: 2026-05-31 · Source: vendor status pages and changelogs, community forums (r/nocode, r/automation, r/GoogleAppsScript, r/PowerAutomate, r/n8n, r/make, r/ClaudeAI), in-product help, vendor help centers

At a glance
PlatformPower Automate Desktop (PAD): UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026
CategoryAutomation Tools
Guide typeProcedure
Skill levelBeginner to intermediate
Time5 - 30 minutes including verification

Automation engineers and no-code builders running Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 hit how to use the Get details of a UI element action to read a button enabled state before clicking often enough that there is a stable fix pattern. I'll walk through the order an experienced day-to-day operator would run it during a real build session, not a hypothetical lab. My standard pattern for this is documented below end to end.

What how to use the get details of a ui element action to read a button enabled state before clicking actually involves on Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026

Real-world context. Cost envelope: ~Rs 500 to Rs 2,500 INR per month for premium tiers (around $6 to $30 USD/month). Time at the keyboard: ~20 minutes to wire up. Time end-to-end including verification: ~1 to 2 hours to test end-to-end. Have an API key, the workflow JSON, and a test payload staged before the first command so you do not stall on missing inputs.

On Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 the kit I reach for first includes UI element picker (Ctrl+left-click) with UIA/UIA3 Raw/MSAA toggle, Power Platform Admin Center > Machines and Machine groups, Power Automate machine runtime application tray icon. Each of these surfaces a different layer of the failure - keep at least the first one in your personal notes so the next time this happens you do not start cold.

For verification on Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026, the methods that survive contact with a real Monday-morning workload are set a breakpoint with F9 on the action and step through with F10 and open Settings > Connections and verify the Power Automate for desktop connection shows Connected. Anything less than that and you are shipping on vibes.

Authoritative sources for Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 that I cross-reference before committing to a fix: learn.microsoft.com/en-us/power-automate/desktop-flows/manage-machine-groups, learn.microsoft.com/en-us/power-automate/desktop-flows/pad-architecture, learn.microsoft.com/en-us/power-automate/desktop-flows/ui-elements. Marketing blog posts and Medium writeups are signal, not ground truth.

The rest of this page is the structured fix path. Start with diagnose, then remediation, then the automation options so you do not have to do this by hand the next time it surfaces. Verify and safety sections at the end are the discipline that keeps the fix from regressing the next time you open the platform.

Diagnose first, fix second

Fifth: replay the failing run against a second account or a second connector on the same Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workspace. The point is to isolate "my credentials" from "my account" from "the whole workspace." If a teammate's identical scenario works but yours does not, the failure is local cache or a stale OAuth grant. If the same scenario fails for everyone in the same workspace, you have a tenant-wide config change or a vendor-side incident. Pin the platform version explicitly while you do this: the platform's About panel, the build hash in the footer, or the engine version returned by a diagnostic call. The version pin is what isolates "their rollout broke me" from "my client is out of date."

Sixth: pin down the latency and reliability envelope on the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 session under real working conditions. Run a long-duration sanity test by executing the failing scenario 10 times over 15 minutes, logging the timestamp and the result (success / error code / which step failed) per attempt to a notes file. Watch for the breakpoint where the success rate dips below 80 percent - that is your real signal that something is wrong, not the one-off failure that prompted the investigation. If you are on a marginal network (cafe wifi, mobile hotspot, hotel network), run the same test on a wired or known-good connection before assuming the platform is the problem. Capture the breakpoint in your personal notes next to the platform version, the account, and the workspace id - the next time this happens to a teammate, the notes are gold.

Third pass: read the HTTP status code and the in-product error message like an x-ray of your Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 session. 4xx is something on your side (auth, scope, payload, sharing), 5xx is theirs (or a shared infra fault). 401 = signed-in session expired or the wrong account is active, 403 = you are signed in but the connector is bound to a different identity, 404 = the URL points to a deleted or moved object, 409 = another run is touching the same record at the same time, 422 = the payload validates against schema but fails a workspace rule (required field, locked field, custom validation), 429 = rate limit on the trigger source or destination API, 5xx = retry after a minute. Cross-reference the in-product error string against the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 help center because the same "something went wrong" toast can mean five different things on a single page. If the same action cycles between 429 and 503 over a tight loop, the API quota on the trigger source is exhausted - slow the scenario down or split it into batches.

Field notes from real Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 incidents

On any Microsoft problem in Power Automate Desktop, the first three questions I ask are: which runtime, which tenant, which trigger source. Defaults shift quietly between platform updates. After any change to an Power Automate Desktop automation I run `in the console, click Runs and confirm Status = Succeeded for the last flow run` to confirm the run actually held, two seconds, one call, zero ambiguity.

I keep Test selector dialog inside the selector builder docked on a second screen whenever I am building inside Power Automate Desktop; one glance tells me whether the run actually fired or silently skipped. Before I mark an Power Automate Desktop ticket resolved I always run `open Power Platform admin > Environments > Machines and confirm the machine status = Available` once more and screenshot the output, that habit has caught at least three silent regressions for me. Whenever a teammate pings me about an Power Automate Desktop automation misbehaving, I make them open Power Platform Admin Center > Machines and Machine groups before we even look at the symptom they reported.

Tools I actually reach for

For most Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 stalls I start with Test selector dialog inside the selector builder, fall back to Power Automate machine runtime application tray icon, WinAppDriver Recorder for cross-checking UIA selectors, Windows Event Viewer (Application log) for PADHost service errors when Test selector dialog inside the selector builder cannot surface the answer, and keep Power Automate for desktop console flow runs panel handy for the cases where neither answers. That ordering is not academic - it matches the layers of the failure as they tend to surface, so the cheapest signal lands first and the heavier tooling only comes out when the simpler answer does not hold up. My muscle-memory shortcut for this is to run the first tool while the failing screen is still open, not after I have already restarted the platform.

Verification I run before I call it fixed

Before I mark a Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 stall resolved, the verification loop below is what I actually run. Each step proves a different layer is green, and the order matters - the cheaper checks gate the more expensive ones.

right-click a UI element > Edit > Test selector, must return Element found

If that one comes back clean, move to the next check. If it does not, stop and dig in there before layering more verification on top of a red signal.

use Display message action to print intermediate variables during test

If that one comes back clean, move to the next check. If it does not, stop and dig in there before layering more verification on top of a red signal.

in the console, click Runs and confirm Status = Succeeded for the last flow run

If that one comes back clean, move to the next check. If it does not, stop and dig in there before layering more verification on top of a red signal.

open Settings > Connections and verify the Power Automate for desktop connection shows Connected

Only when every line above runs clean do I close the loop and update my notes with the timestamps.

Where I check first when the docs disagree

When two sources contradict each other on a Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 detail, the disambiguation order I lean on is stable. I usually check github.com/MicrosoftDocs/power-automate-docs for the ground-truth view on this part of Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026. I usually check learn.microsoft.com/en-us/power-automate/desktop-flows/actions-reference/webautomation for the ground-truth view on this part of Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026. I usually check learn.microsoft.com/en-us/power-automate/desktop-flows/ui-elements for the ground-truth view on this part of Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026. Marketing blog posts and Medium writeups are signal, not ground truth, and I treat them as such until the references above either confirm or contradict the claim.

Solution-focused remediation path

Before any destructive step on a Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workspace, slow down and stage rollback. Snapshot the current platform version, the current workspace settings (Settings -> screenshot every tab), the connected-apps list, the current sharing policy, and the current member list to a notes entry first. Capture the failing screenshot, the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 incident id if any, and the timestamp window. Photograph (screenshot) the workspace state from two angles: the scenario or script that is failing, and the workspace settings page that controls the relevant policy. Then do the destructive step (revoke a connector, change a sharing default, remove a member, delete a connected app) inside a test workspace or a test scenario first, never the whole workspace. Capture the platform version, the API permissions, the connected-app list, the workspace member roster, and the relevant integration log snapshot to your notes before the destructive step. Decision point: if you are on a paid plan, the cheapest correct path is almost always to open the in-product support chat in parallel with the rollback - the support rep can confirm whether a vendor-side rollout is responsible while you are still staging the change, which avoids a needless workspace edit if the fix is server-side.

If the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 platform is slow, stale, or serving cached errors, work the cache and CDN stack in order. Sign out of the desktop app or browser session, quit it fully (Cmd+Q on macOS, right-click the system tray icon -> Quit on Windows - not just the close button), reopen, sign back in. Clear the local cache (most platforms expose this under Help -> Clear cache, or Settings -> Advanced -> Reset cache). Hard-refresh the web app with Ctrl+Shift+R (or Cmd+Shift+R on macOS) to bypass the local browser cache. Always capture timing before the cache clear to baseline: time how long the failing run takes three times, write it down, then repeat after the cache clear so the delta is provable in your notes. Decision point: managed-device issues go through your IT admin for a tenant-wide config push; personal-device issues go through the in-product Help + Diagnostics flow before you escalate to support.

For Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 integrations where rate limits or plan quotas are suspect, read the in-product hints honestly. "You have reached the limit for this workspace" usually means you hit an operation, task, or run cap on the current plan tier. "Slow down, you are sending requests too quickly" is the rate-limit signal on the trigger source or destination API. "This payload is too large" is the per-call cap. Each is telling you the exact same thing in a Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026-specific dialect. Apply exponential backoff for API-driven runs (base 1s, double up to 60s, retry up to 5 times) and split a large batch into chunks of 100 records at a time. Decision point: if you are hitting the quota sustained rather than in bursts, upgrade the plan tier or request a quota increase from the workspace admin with a written usage justification; without it, batch the work or shed load at the producer. Replay the failing scenario against a fresh test workspace at half the throughput to confirm the new safe rate before pushing to the real workspace.

Automate this fix so you do not do it twice

Scrape Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workspace audit log + integration log via scheduled job

For the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026, workflow faults usually surface as failed run executions, audit-log denials, or quota nags before a full hang. A weekly scheduled job that exports the last 7 days of these events to CSV gives you a paper trail to correlate with platform updates, policy changes, and vendor incidents without staring at the settings panel live. Register the task via cron (Linux / macOS), Windows Task Scheduler (schtasks /create /XML), or a GitHub Actions schedule, then write the CSV to Dropbox / OneDrive / Google Drive for retention. Subscribe a simple dashboard (Google Sheets with a daily import, Airtable scheduled sync, Notion database via the API) to the same bucket so audit events from every Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workspace converge on a single view without per-workspace clicking.

# Export the platform audit log via the API (Enterprise plan)
curl -X POST https://api.example.com/v1/audit_logs \ -H "Authorization: Bearer $PLATFORM_TOKEN" \ -H "Accept: application/json" \ -d '{"start_date":"2026-05-24","end_date":"2026-05-31"}' \ -o power-audit-log.json
# Export the run history for the last 7 days
curl -G https://api.example.com/v1/runs \ -H "Authorization: Bearer $PLATFORM_TOKEN" \ --data-urlencode "oldest=$(date -d '7 days ago' +%s)" \ -o power-runs.json

Automate Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 session + sharing-policy snapshots via vendor CLI or API

On the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026, regular session and policy snapshots catch silent role changes, sharing-default drift, and stale OAuth grants well before the workflow starts failing in prod. Pair vendor health checks (the platform's admin SDK, the platform's users API, the connector listing) with a token-validity check so both vendor-side and account-side issues land in one folder. Run the scheduled task on a control plane device (a small VPS, a GitHub Actions runner, a Cloud Function) under a tightly scoped service account that mirrors the real workspace policy.

# List workspace members + roles
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $PLATFORM_TOKEN" \ https://api.example.com/v1/workspace/members \ > power-members.json
# List active connectors + their last-tested timestamp
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $PLATFORM_TOKEN" \ https://api.example.com/v1/connectors \ > power-connectors.json
# Validate the bearer token itself
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $PLATFORM_TOKEN" \ https://api.example.com/v1/me \ > power-me.json

Monitor + alert via Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 admin reports, audit logs, and personal dashboard ingestion

For the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026, the most useful long-running telemetry is the admin reports + audit logs shipped to a personal dashboard (Google Sheets daily import, Airtable scheduled sync, Notion database via the API, Grafana with a CSV source) and graphed on a single view. Pair that with synthetic monitoring (a small script that triggers the failing scenario or runs the failing action every 5 minutes from at least two devices) so a regional incident lights up before teammates report it. Subscribe the personal inbox or a private Slack channel to the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 status page (Atom/RSS or Statuspage webhook) plus the vendor X/Twitter status handle so an open incident self-correlates with the synthetic failures.

# Tiny synthetic monitor - hit the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 health endpoint every 5 minutes
while true; do curl -s -o /dev/null -w "%{http_code} %{time_total} $(date -Iseconds)\n" \ -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" \ https://api.example.com/v1/me \ >> ~/logs/power-synth.log sleep 300
done

Common pitfalls and what to watch for

Read-only validation before any write is the single step most Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 fixes skip, and it is the step that lets you roll back when a fix backfires. Screenshot every existing settings page (the workspace settings, the sharing policy, the connected-apps list, the members page, the plan tier page), capture the failing screenshot in a notes entry, export the relevant log to CSV if the platform supports it (the platform's run-history export, the audit-log download), and screenshot the activity feed showing the failing window before any change. On Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workspaces with multiple environments (test workspace, real workspace) record the platform version, the settings state, and the connected-apps list in each before toggling anything, because a "fix" pushed only to the test workspace is a known regression vector when the real workspace has a different policy.

The mirror-image mistake is confusing a user-side symptom with a vendor fault on Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026. A persistent 403 is often a connector-level change pushed by the workspace owner rather than a Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 bug. A "scenario not found" can be a moved scenario rather than a deleted one. A "webhook not firing" is frequently a corporate proxy or firewall dropping the Power Automate Desktop (PAD), UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 egress IP rather than a vendor-side regression.

Verify the fix worked

Safety, rollback, blast radius

FAQ

How long does how to use the get details of a ui element action to read a button enabled state before clicking typically take on Power Automate Desktop (PAD). UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026?
For most Power Automate Desktop (PAD): UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workflows, 5 to 30 minutes including verification. Large workspace migrations, anything touching API token rotation or SSO cutover, or cross-region exports can stretch to half a day because you have to wait for re-share notifications, OAuth re-consent, or coordinated team windows.
Is there a rollback path?
Yes for most Power Automate Desktop (PAD). UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 changes. Snapshot the platform version, screenshot the workspace settings, export the audit log, and write down the API token before any change. A few operations are one-way (deleted scenarios past the trash window, irreversible plan downgrades, permanently revoked connectors). Check the in-product help for the specific operation before you commit.
Will this affect other teammates in the Power Automate Desktop (PAD): UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workspace?
Often yes. Power Automate Desktop (PAD). UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workspaces share sharing policies, plan quotas, member rosters, and connected-app permissions across the whole tenant (one connected-app grant holds permissions for many integrations, one sharing policy covers all scenarios, one plan tier covers all members). Use the Power Automate Desktop (PAD): UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 workspace audit log and the connected-apps list to enumerate dependencies before changing a shared component.
What if my platform version or workspace policy does not match these steps?
Vendor defaults move between releases. The steps in this page reflect mainstream defaults as of 2026-05-31 but the underlying workflow patterns do not change as fast. If a path differs on your version, fall back to the in-product help, the Power Automate Desktop (PAD). UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 status page incident history, or the community forum - those almost always still work.
Where do I get vendor support if I am still stuck?
If you have a paid Business / Enterprise plan, open a case via the in-product help chat with: the exact verbatim error string, the failing screenshot, the URL of the scenario or workspace, your account email, the platform version, and your reproduction steps. The Power Automate Desktop (PAD): UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 community forum and r/nocode are the no-cost public alternatives - search there first; 80 percent of common Power Automate Desktop (PAD). UI Automation, Browser, Excel & Machine Groups, 2026 issues already have a working answer voted to the top.

References

Related guides worth a look while you sort this one out: