Reference for writing expressions for attribute mappings in Microsoft Entra ID

When you configure provisioning to a SaaS application, one of the types of attribute mappings that you can specify is an expression mapping. For these mappings, you must write a script-like expression that allows you to transform your users' data into formats that are more acceptable for the SaaS application.

Syntax overview

The syntax for Expressions for Attribute Mappings is reminiscent of Visual Basic for Applications (VBA) functions.

  • The entire expression must be defined in terms of functions, which consist of a name followed by arguments in parentheses: FunctionName(<<argument 1>>,<<argument N>>)

  • You can nest functions within each other. For example: FunctionOne(FunctionTwo(<<argument1>>))

  • You can pass three different types of arguments into functions:

    1. Attributes, which must be enclosed in square brackets. For example: [attributeName]
    2. String constants, which must be enclosed in double quotes. For example: "United States"
    3. Other Functions. For example: FunctionOne(<<argument1>>, FunctionTwo(<<argument2>>))
  • For string constants, if you need a backslash ( \ ) or quotation mark ( " ) in the string, it must be escaped with the backslash ( \ ) symbol. For example: "Company name: \"Contoso\""

  • The syntax is case-sensitive, which must be considered while typing them as strings in a function vs copy pasting them directly from here.

List of Functions

Append      AppRoleAssignmentsComplex      BitAnd      CBool      CDate      Coalesce      ConvertToBase64      ConvertToUTF8Hex      Count      CStr      DateAdd      DateDiff      DateFromNum  FormatDateTime      Guid      IgnoreFlowIfNullOrEmpty     IIF     InStr      IsNull      IsNullOrEmpty      IsPresent      IsString      Item      Join      Left      Mid      NormalizeDiacritics       Not      Now      NumFromDate      PCase      RandomString      Redact      RemoveDuplicates      Replace      SelectUniqueValue     SingleAppRoleAssignment     Split    StripSpaces      Switch     ToLower     ToUpper     Word


Append

Function: Append(source, suffix)

Description: Takes a source string value and appends the suffix to the end of it.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String Usually name of the attribute from the source object.
suffix Required String The string that you want to append to the end of the source value.

Append constant suffix to user name

Example: If you're using a Salesforce Sandbox, you might need to append another suffix to all your user names before synchronizing them.

Expression: Append([userPrincipalName], ".test")

Sample input/output:


AppRoleAssignmentsComplex

Function: AppRoleAssignmentsComplex([appRoleAssignments])

Description: Used to configure multiple roles for a user. For detailed usage, see Tutorial - Customize user provisioning attribute-mappings for SaaS applications in Microsoft Entra ID.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
[appRoleAssignments] Required String [appRoleAssignments] object.

BitAnd

Function: BitAnd(value1, value2)

Description: This function converts both parameters to the binary representation and sets a bit to:

  • 0 - if one or both of the corresponding bits in value1 and value2 are 0
  • 1 - if both of the corresponding bits are 1.

In other words, it returns 0 in all cases except when the corresponding bits of both parameters are 1.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
value1 Required Num Numeric value that should be AND'ed with value2
value2 Required Num Numeric value that should be AND'ed with value1

Example: BitAnd(&HF, &HF7)

11110111 AND 00000111 = 00000111 so BitAnd returns 7, the binary value of 00000111.


CBool

Function: CBool(Expression)

Description: CBool returns a boolean based on the evaluated expression. If the expression evaluates to a non-zero value, then CBool returns True, else it returns False.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
Expression Required expression Any valid expression

Example: CBool([attribute1] = [attribute2])
Returns True if both attributes have the same value.


CDate

Function:
CDate(expression)

Description:
The CDate function returns a UTC DateTime from a string. DateTime isn't a native attribute type but it can be used within date functions such as FormatDateTime and DateAdd.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
Expression Required Expression Any valid string that represents a date/time. For supported formats, refer to .NET custom date and time format strings.

Remarks:
The returned string is always in UTC and follows the format M/d/yyyy h:mm:ss tt.

Example 1:
CDate([StatusHireDate])
Sample input/output:

  • INPUT (StatusHireDate): "2020-03-16-07:00"
  • OUTPUT: "3/16/2020 7:00:00 AM" <-- Note the UTC equivalent of the above DateTime is returned

Example 2:
CDate("2021-06-30+08:00")
Sample input/output:

  • INPUT: "2021-06-30+08:00"
  • OUTPUT: "6/29/2021 4:00:00 PM" <-- Note the UTC equivalent of the above DateTime is returned

Example 3:
CDate("2009-06-15T01:45:30-07:00")
Sample input/output:

  • INPUT: "2009-06-15T01:45:30-07:00"
  • OUTPUT: "6/15/2009 8:45:30 AM" <-- Note the UTC equivalent of the above DateTime is returned

Coalesce

Function: Coalesce(source1, source2, ..., defaultValue)

Description: Returns the first source value that isn't NULL. If all arguments are NULL and defaultValue is present, the defaultValue is returned. If all arguments are NULL and defaultValue isn't present, Coalesce returns NULL.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source1 … sourceN Required String Required, variable-number of times. Usually name of the attribute from the source object.
defaultValue Optional String Default value to be used when all source values are NULL. Can be empty string ("").

Flow mail value if not NULL, otherwise flow userPrincipalName

Example: You wish to flow the mail attribute if it's present. If it isn't, you wish to flow the value of userPrincipalName instead.

Expression: Coalesce([mail],[userPrincipalName])

Sample input/output:


ConvertToBase64

Function: ConvertToBase64(source)

Description: The ConvertToBase64 function converts a string to a Unicode base64 string.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String String to be converted to base 64

Example: ConvertToBase64("Hello world!")

Returns "SABlAGwAbABvACAAdwBvAHIAbABkACEA"


ConvertToUTF8Hex

Function: ConvertToUTF8Hex(source)

Description: The ConvertToUTF8Hex function converts a string to a UTF8 Hex encoded value.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String String to be converted to UTF8 Hex

Example: ConvertToUTF8Hex("Hello world!")

Returns 48656C6C6F20776F726C6421


Count

Function: Count(attribute)

Description: The Count function returns the number of elements in a multi-valued attribute.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
attribute Required attribute Multi-valued attribute that has elements counted

CStr

Function: CStr(value)

Description: The CStr function converts a value to a string data type.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
value Required numeric, reference, or boolean Can be a numeric value, reference attribute, or Boolean.

Example: CStr([dn])

Returns "cn=Joe,dc=contoso,dc=com"


DateAdd

Function:
DateAdd(interval, value, dateTime)

Description:
Returns a date/time string representing a date to which a specified time interval is added. The returned date is in the format: M/d/yyyy h:mm:ss tt.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
interval Required String Interval of time you want to add. See accepted values after this table.
value Required Number The number of units you want to add. It can be positive (to get dates in the future) or negative (to get dates in the past).
dateTime Required DateTime DateTime representing date to which the interval is added.

When passing a date string as input, use CDate function to wrap the datetime string. To get system time in UTC, use the Now function.

The interval string must have one of the following values:

  • yyyy Year
  • m Month
  • d Day
  • ww Week
  • h Hour
  • n Minute
  • s Second

Example 1: Generate a date value based on incoming StatusHireDate from Workday
DateAdd("d", 7, CDate([StatusHireDate]))

Example interval value dateTime (value of variable StatusHireDate) output
Add 7 days to hire date "d" 7 2012-03-16-07:00 3/23/2012 7:00:00 AM
Get a date ten days before to hire date "d" -10 2012-03-16-07:00 3/6/2012 7:00:00 AM
Add two weeks to hire date "ww" 2 2012-03-16-07:00 3/30/2012 7:00:00 AM
Add ten months to hire date "m" 10 2012-03-16-07:00 1/16/2013 7:00:00 AM
Add two years to hire date "yyyy" 2 2012-03-16-07:00 3/16/2014 7:00:00 AM

DateDiff

Function:
DateDiff(interval, date1, date2)

Description:
This function uses the interval parameter to return a number that indicates the difference between the two input dates. It returns

  • a positive number if date2 > date1,
  • a negative number if date2 < date1,
  • 0 if date2 == date1

Parameters:

Name Required/Optional Type Notes
interval Required String Interval of time to use for calculating the difference.
date1 Required DateTime DateTime representing a valid date.
date2 Required DateTime DateTime representing a valid date.

When passing a date string as input, use CDate function to wrap the datetime string. To get system time in UTC, use the Now function.

The interval string must have one of the following values:

  • yyyy Year
  • m Month
  • d Day
  • ww Week
  • h Hour
  • n Minute
  • s Second

Example 1: Compare current date with hire date from Workday with different intervals
DateDiff("d", Now(), CDate([StatusHireDate]))

Example interval date1 date2 output
Positive difference in days between two dates d 2021-08-18+08:00 2021-08-31+08:00 13
Negative difference in days between two dates d 8/25/2021 5:41:18 PM 2012-03-16-07:00 -3449
Difference in weeks between two dates ww 8/25/2021 5:41:18 PM 2012-03-16-07:00 -493
Difference in months between two dates m 8/25/2021 5:41:18 PM 2012-03-16-07:00 -113
Difference in years between two dates yyyy 8/25/2021 5:41:18 PM 2012-03-16-07:00 -9
Difference when both dates are same d 2021-08-31+08:00 2021-08-31+08:00 0
Difference in hours between two dates h 2021-08-24 2021-08-25 24
Difference in minutes between two dates n 2021-08-24 2021-08-25 1440
Difference in seconds between two dates s 2021-08-24 2021-08-25 86400

Example 2: Combine DateDiff with IIF function to set attribute value
If an account is Active in Workday, set the accountEnabled attribute of the user to True only if hire date is within the next five days.

Switch([Active], , 
  "1", IIF(DateDiff("d", Now(), CDate([StatusHireDate])) > 5, "False", "True"), 
  "0", "False")

DateFromNum

Function: DateFromNum(value)

Description: The DateFromNum function converts a value in AD's date format to a DateTime type.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
value Required Date AD Date to be converted to DateTime type

Example: DateFromNum([lastLogonTimestamp])

DateFromNum(129699324000000000)

Returns a DateTime representing January 1, 2012 at 11:00PM.


FormatDateTime

Function: FormatDateTime(source, dateTimeStyles, inputFormat, outputFormat)

Description: Takes a date string from one format and converts it into a different format.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String Usually name of the attribute from the source object.
dateTimeStyles Optional String Use this parameter to specify the formatting options that customize string parsing for some date and time parsing methods. For supported values, see DateTimeStyles doc. If left empty, the default value used is DateTimeStyles.RoundtripKind, DateTimeStyles.AllowLeadingWhite, DateTimeStyles.AllowTrailingWhite
inputFormat Required String Expected format of the source value. For supported formats, see .NET custom date and time format strings.
outputFormat Required String Format of the output date.

Output date as a string in a certain format

Example: You want to send dates to a SaaS application like ServiceNow in a certain format. You can consider using the following expression.

Expression:

FormatDateTime([extensionAttribute1], , "yyyyMMddHHmmss.fZ", "yyyy-MM-dd")

Sample input/output:

  • INPUT (extensionAttribute1): "20150123105347.1Z"
  • OUTPUT: "2015-01-23"

Guid

Function: Guid()

Description: The function Guid generates a new random GUID

Example:
Guid()
Sample output: "00aa00aa-bb11-cc22-dd33-44ee44ee44ee"


IgnoreFlowIfNullOrEmpty

Function: IgnoreFlowIfNullOrEmpty(expression)

Description: The IgnoreFlowIfNullOrEmpty function instructs the provisioning service to ignore the attribute and drop it from the flow if the enclosed function or attribute is NULL or empty.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
Expression Required Expression Expression to be evaluated

Example 1: Don't flow an attribute if it's null
IgnoreFlowIfNullOrEmpty([department])
The above expression drops the department attribute from the provisioning flow if it's null or empty.

Example 2: Don't flow an attribute if the expression mapping evaluates to empty string or null
Let's say the SuccessFactors attribute prefix is mapped to the on-premises Active Directory attribute personalTitle using the following expression mapping:
IgnoreFlowIfNullOrEmpty(Switch([prefix], "", "3443", "Dr.", "3444", "Prof.", "3445", "Prof. Dr."))
The above expression first evaluates the Switch function. If the prefix attribute doesn't have any of the values listed within the Switch function, then ** returns an empty string and the attribute personalTitle is not included in the provisioning flow to on-premises Active Directory.


IIF

Function: IIF(condition,valueIfTrue,valueIfFalse)

Description: The IIF function returns one of a set of possible values based on a specified condition.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
condition Required Variable or Expression Any value or expression that can be evaluated to true or false.
valueIfTrue Required Variable or String If the condition evaluates to true, the returned value.
valueIfFalse Required Variable or String If the condition evaluates to false, the returned value.

The following comparison operators can be used in the condition:

  • Equal to (=) and not equal to (<>)
  • Greater than (>) and greater than equal to (>=)
  • Less than (<) and less than equal to (<=)

Example: Set the target attribute value to source country attribute if country="USA", else set target attribute value to source department attribute. IIF([country]="USA",[country],[department])

Known limitations

This section includes limitations and workarounds for the IIF function. For information about troubleshooting user creation issues, see Creation fails due to null / empty values.

  • The IIF function currently doesn't support AND and OR logical operators.
  • To implement AND logic, use nested IIF statement chained along the trueValue path. Example: If country="USA" and state="CA", return value "True", else return "False". IIF([country]="USA",IIF([state]="CA","True","False"),"False")
  • To implement OR logic, use nested IIF statement chained along the falseValue path. Example: If country="USA" or state="CA", return value "True", else return "False". IIF([country]="USA","True",IIF([state]="CA","True","False"))
  • If the source attribute used within the IIF function is empty or null, the condition check fails.
    • Unsupported IIF expression examples:
      • IIF([country]="","Other",[country])
      • IIF(IsNullOrEmpty([country]),"Other",[country])
      • IIF(IsPresent([country]),[country],"Other")
    • Recommended workaround: Use the Switch function to check for empty/null values. Example: If country attribute is empty, set value "Other". If it's present, pass the country attribute value to target attribute.
      • Switch([country],[country],"","Other")

InStr

Function: InStr(value1, value2, start, compareType)

Description: The InStr function finds the first occurrence of a substring in a string.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
value1 Required String String to be searched
value2 Required String String to be found
start Optional Integer Starting position to find the substring
compareType Optional Enum Can be vbTextCompare or vbBinaryCompare

Example: InStr("The quick brown fox","quick")

Evaluates to 5

InStr("repEated","e",3,vbBinaryCompare)

Evaluates to 7


IsNull

Function: IsNull(Expression)

Description: If the expression evaluates to Null, then the IsNull function returns true. For an attribute, a Null is expressed by the absence of the attribute.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
Expression Required Expression Expression to be evaluated

Example: IsNull([displayName])

Returns True if the attribute isn't present.


IsNullorEmpty

Function: IsNullOrEmpty(Expression)

Description: If the expression is null or an empty string, then the IsNullOrEmpty function returns true. This evaluates to True if the attribute is absent or is present but is an empty string. The inverse of this function is named IsPresent.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
Expression Required Expression Expression to be evaluated

Example: IsNullOrEmpty([displayName])

Returns True if the attribute isn't present or is an empty string.


IsPresent

Function: IsPresent(Expression)

Description: If the expression evaluates to a string that isn't Null and isn't empty, then the IsPresent function returns true. The inverse of this function is named IsNullOrEmpty.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
Expression Required Expression Expression to be evaluated

Example: Switch(IsPresent([directManager]),[directManager], IsPresent([skiplevelManager]),[skiplevelManager], IsPresent([director]),[director])


IsString

Function: IsString(Expression)

Description: If the expression can be evaluated to a string type, then the IsString function evaluates to True.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
Expression Required Expression Expression to be evaluated

Item

Function: Item(attribute, index)

Description: The Item function returns one item from a multi-valued string/attribute.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
attribute Required Attribute Multi-valued attribute to be searched
index Required Integer Index to an item in the multi-valued string

Example: Item([proxyAddresses], 1) returns the first item in the multi-valued attribute. Index 0 shouldn't be used.


Join

Function: Join(separator, source1, source2, …)

Description: Join() is similar to Append(), except that it can combine multiple source string values into a single string, and each value is separated by a separator string.

If one of the source values is a multi-value attribute, then every value in that attribute is joined together, separated by the separator value.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
separator Required String String used to separate source values when they're concatenated into one string. Can be "" if no separator is required.
source1 … sourceN Required, variable-number of times String String values to be joined together.

Left

Function: Left(String, NumChars)

Description: The Left function returns a specified number of characters from the left of a string. If numChars = 0, return empty string. If numChars < 0, return input string. If string is null, return empty string. If string contains fewer characters than the number specified in numChars, a string identical to string (that is, containing all characters in parameter 1) is returned.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
String Required Attribute The string to return characters from
NumChars Required Integer A number identifying the number of characters to return from the beginning (left) of string

Example: Left("John Doe", 3)

Returns "Joh".


Mid

Function: Mid(source, start, length)

Description: Returns a substring of the source value. A substring is a string that contains only some of the characters from the source string.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String Usually name of the attribute.
start Required Integer Index in the source string where substring should start. First character in the string has an index of 1, second character has an index 2, and so on.
length Required Integer Length of the substring. If length ends outside the source string, function returns substring from start index until end of source string.

NormalizeDiacritics

Function: NormalizeDiacritics(source)

Description: Requires one string argument. Returns the string, but with any diacritical characters replaced with equivalent nondiacritical characters. Typically used to convert first names and last names containing diacritical characters (accent marks) into legal values that can be used in various user identifiers such as user principal names, SAM account names, and email addresses.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String Usually a first name or last name attribute.
Character with Diacritic Normalized character Character with Diacritic Normalized character
ä, à, â, ã, å, á, ą, ă, ā, ā́, ā̀, ā̂, ā̃, ǟ, ā̈, ǡ, a̱, å̄ a Ä, À, Â, Ã, Å, Á, Ą, Ă, Ā, Ā́, Ā̀, Ā̂, Ā̃, Ǟ, Ā̈, Ǡ, A̱, Å̄ A
æ, ǣ ae Æ, Ǣ AE
ç, č, ć, c̄, c̱ c Ç, Č, Ć, C̄, C̱ C
ď, d̄, ḏ d Ď, D̄, Ḏ D
ë, è, é, ê, ę, ě, ė, ē, ḗ, ḕ, ē̂, ē̃, ê̄, e̱, ë̄, e̊̄ e Ë, È, É, Ê, Ę, Ě, Ė, Ē, Ḗ, Ḕ, Ē̂, Ē̃, Ê̄, E̱, Ë̄, E̊̄ E
ğ, ḡ, g̱ g Ğ, Ḡ, G̱ G
ï, î, ì, í, ı, ī, ī́, ī̀, ī̂, ī̃, i̱ i Ï, Î, Ì, Í, İ, Ī, Ī́, Ī̀, Ī̂, Ī̃, I̱ I
ľ, ł, l̄, ḹ, ḻ l Ł, Ľ, L̄, Ḹ, Ḻ L
ñ, ń, ň, n̄, ṉ n Ñ, Ń, Ň, N̄, Ṉ N
ö, ò, ő, õ, ô, ó, ō, ṓ, ṑ, ō̂, ō̃, ȫ, ō̈, ǭ, ȭ, ȱ, o̱ o Ö, Ò, Ő, Õ, Ô, Ó, Ō, Ṓ, Ṑ, Ō̂, Ō̃, Ȫ, Ō̈, Ǭ, Ȭ, Ȱ, O̱ O
ø, ø̄, œ̄ oe Ø, Ø̄, Œ̄ OE
ř, r̄, ṟ, ṝ r Ř, R̄, Ṟ, Ṝ R
ß ss
š, ś, ș, ş, s̄, s̱ s Š, Ś, Ș, Ş, S̄, S̱ S
ť, ț, t̄, ṯ t Ť, Ț, T̄, Ṯ T
ü, ù, û, ú, ů, ű, ū, ū́, ū̀, ū̂, ū̃, u̇̄, ǖ, ṻ, ṳ̄, u̱ u Ü, Ù, Û, Ú, Ů, Ű, Ū, Ū́, Ū̀, Ū̂, Ū̃, U̇̄, Ǖ, Ṻ, Ṳ̄, U̱ U
ÿ, ý, ȳ, ȳ́, ȳ̀, ȳ̃, y̱ y Ÿ, Ý, Ȳ, Ȳ́, Ȳ̀, Ȳ̃, Y̱ Y
ź, ž, ż, z̄, ẕ z Ź, Ž, Ż, Z̄, Ẕ Z

Remove diacritics from a string

Example: Replace characters containing accent marks with equivalent characters that don't contain accent marks.

Expression: NormalizeDiacritics([givenName])

Sample input/output:

  • INPUT (givenName): "Zoë"
  • OUTPUT: "Zoe"

Not

Function: Not(source)

Description: Flips the boolean value of the source. If source value is True, returns False. Otherwise, returns True.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required Boolean String Expected source values are "True" or "False".

Now

Function: Now()

Description:
The Now function returns a string representing the current UTC DateTime in the format M/d/yyyy h:mm:ss tt.

Example: Now()
Example value returned 7/2/2021 3:33:38 PM


NumFromDate

Function: NumFromDate(value)

Description: The NumFromDate function converts a DateTime value to Active Directory format that is required to set attributes like accountExpires. Use this function to convert DateTime values received from cloud HR apps like Workday and SuccessFactors to their equivalent AD representation.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
value Required String Date time string in ISO 8601 format. If the date variable is in a different format, use FormatDateTime function to convert the date to ISO 8601 format.

Example:

  • Workday example: Assuming you want to map the attribute ContractEndDate from Workday, which is in the format 2020-12-31-08:00 to accountExpires field in AD, here's how you can use this function and change the timezone offset to match your locale. NumFromDate(Join("", FormatDateTime([ContractEndDate], ,"yyyy-MM-ddzzz", "yyyy-MM-dd"), " 23:59:59-08:00"))

  • SuccessFactors example: Assuming you want to map the attribute endDate from SuccessFactors, which is in the format M/d/yyyy hh:mm:ss tt to accountExpires field in AD, here's how you can use this function and change the time zone offset to match your locale. NumFromDate(Join("",FormatDateTime([endDate], ,"M/d/yyyy hh:mm:ss tt","yyyy-MM-dd")," 23:59:59-08:00"))


PCase

Function: PCase(source, wordSeparators)

Description: The PCase function converts the first character of each word in a string to upper case, and all other characters are converted to lower case.

Parameters:

Name Required/Optional Type Notes
source Required String source value to convert to proper case.
wordSeparators Optional String Specify a set of characters that is used as word separators (example: " ,-'")

Remarks:

  • If the wordSeparators parameter isn't specified, then PCase internally invokes the .NET function ToTitleCase to convert the source string to proper case. The .NET function ToTitleCase supports a comprehensive set of the Unicode character categories as word separators.
    • Space character
    • New line character
    • Control characters like CRLF
    • Format control characters
    • ConnectorPunctuation characters like underscore
    • DashPunctuation characters like dash and hyphen (including characters such En Dash, Em Dash, double hyphen, and so on)
    • OpenPunctuation and ClosePunctuation characters that occur in pairs like parenthesis, curly bracket, angle bracket, and so on.
    • InitialQuotePunctuation and FinalQuotePunctuation characters like single quotes, double quotes, and angular quotes.
    • OtherPunctuation characters like exclamation mark, number sign, percent sign, ampersand, asterisk, comma, full stop, colon, semi-colon, and so on.
    • MathSymbol characters like plus sign, less-than and greater-than sign, vertical line, tilde, equals sign, and so on.
    • CurrencySymbol characters like dollar sign, cent sign, pound sign, euro sign, and so on.
    • ModifierSymbol characters like macron, accents, arrow heads, and so on.
    • OtherSymbol characters like copyright sign, degree sign, registered sign, and so on.
  • If the wordSeparators parameter is specified, then PCase only uses the characters specified as word separators.

Example:

Let's say you're sourcing the attributes firstName and lastName from SAP SuccessFactors and in HR both these attributes are in upper-case. Using the PCase function, you can convert the name to proper case as shown here.

Expression Input Output Notes
PCase([firstName]) firstName = "PABLO GONSALVES (SECOND)" "Pablo Gonsalves (Second)" As the wordSeparators parameter isn't specified, the PCase function uses the default word separators character set.
PCase([lastName]," '-") lastName = "PINTO-DE'SILVA" "Pinto-De'Silva" The PCase function uses characters in the wordSeparators parameter to identify words and transform them to proper case.
PCase(Join(" ",[firstName],[lastName])) firstName = GREGORY, lastName = "JAMES" "Gregory James" You can nest the Join function within PCase. As the wordSeparators parameter isn't specified, the PCase function uses the default word separators character set.

RandomString

Function: RandomString(Length, MinimumNumbers, MinimumSpecialCharacters, MinimumCapital, MinimumLowerCase, CharactersToAvoid)

Description: The RandomString function generates a random string based on the conditions specified. Characters allowed can be identified here.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
Length Required Number Total length of the random string. This should be greater than or equal to the sum of MinimumNumbers, MinimumSpecialCharacters, and MinimumCapital. 256 characters max.
MinimumNumbers Required Number Minimum numbers in the random string.
MinimumSpecialCharacters Required Number Minimum number of special characters.
MinimumCapital Required Number Minimum number of capital letters in the random string.
MinimumLowerCase Required Number Minimum number of lower case letters in the random string.
CharactersToAvoid Optional String Characters to be excluded when generating the random string.

Example 1: - Generate a random string without special character restrictions: RandomString(6,3,0,0,3) Generates a random string with 6 characters. The string contains 3 numbers and 3 lower case characters (1a73qt).

Example 2: - Generate a random string with special character restrictions: RandomString(10,2,2,2,1,"?,") Generates a random string with 10 characters. The string contains at least 2 numbers, 2 special characters, 2 capital letters, 1 lower case letter and excludes the characters "?" and "," (1@!2BaRg53).


Redact

Function: Redact()

Description: The Redact function replaces the attribute value with the string literal "[Redact]" in the provisioning logs.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
attribute/value Required String Specify the attribute or constant / string to redact from the logs.

Example 1: Redact an attribute: Redact([userPrincipalName]) Removes the userPrincipalName from the provisioning logs.

Example 2: Redact a string: Redact("StringToBeRedacted") Removes a constant string from the provisioning logs.

Example 3: Redact a random string: Redact(RandomString(6,3,0,0,3)) Removes the random string from the provisioning logs.


RemoveDuplicates

Function: RemoveDuplicates(attribute)

Description: The RemoveDuplicates function takes a multi-valued string and make sure each value is unique.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
attribute Required Multi-valued Attribute Multi-valued attribute that has duplicates removed

Example: RemoveDuplicates([proxyAddresses]) Returns a sanitized proxyAddress attribute where all duplicate values are removed.


Replace

Function: Replace(source, oldValue, regexPattern, regexGroupName, replacementValue, replacementAttributeName, template)

Description: Replaces values within a string in a case-sensitive manner. The function behaves differently depending on the parameters provided:

  • When oldValue and replacementValue are provided:

    • Replaces all occurrences of oldValue in the source with replacementValue
  • When oldValue and template are provided:

    • Replaces all occurrences of the oldValue in the template with the source value
  • When regexPattern and replacementValue are provided:

    • The function applies the regexPattern to the source string and you can use the regex group names to construct the string for replacementValue

Note

To learn more about regex grouping constructs and named sub-expressions, see Grouping Constructs in Regular Expressions.

  • When regexPattern, regexGroupName, replacementValue are provided:

    • The function applies the regexPattern to the source string and replaces all values matching regexGroupName with replacementValue
  • When regexPattern, regexGroupName, replacementAttributeName are provided:

    • If source has a value, source is returned
    • If source has no value, the function applies the regexPattern to the replacementAttributeName and returns the value matching regexGroupName

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String Usually name of the attribute from the source object.
oldValue Optional String Value to be replaced in source or template.
regexPattern Optional String Regex pattern for the value to be replaced in source. When replacementAttributeName is used, the regexPattern is applied to extract a value from replacementAttributeName.
regexGroupName Optional String Name of the group inside regexPattern. When named replacementAttributeName is used, we extract the value of the named regex group from the replacementAttributeName and return it as the replacement value.
replacementValue Optional String New value to replace old one with.
replacementAttributeName Optional String Name of the attribute to be used for replacement value
template Optional String When template value is provided, we look for oldValue inside the template and replace it with source value.

Replace characters using a regular expression

Example 1: Using oldValue and replacementValue to replace the entire source string with another string.

Let's say your HR system has an attribute BusinessTitle. As part of recent job title changes, your company wants to update anyone with the business title "Product Developer" to "Software Engineer". Then in this case, you can use the following expression in your attribute mapping.

Replace([BusinessTitle],"Product Developer", , , "Software Engineer", , )

  • source: [BusinessTitle]
  • oldValue: "Product Developer"
  • replacementValue: "Software Engineer"
  • Expression output: Software Engineer

Example 2: Using oldValue and template to insert the source string into another templatized string.

The parameter oldValue is a misnomer in this scenario. It's actually the value that gets replaced.
Let's say you want to always generate login ID in the format <username>@contoso.com. There's a source attribute called UserID and you want that value to be used for the <username> portion of the login ID. Then in this case, you can use the following expression in your attribute mapping.

Replace([UserID],"<username>", , , , , "<username>@contoso.com")

  • source: [UserID] = "jsmith"
  • oldValue: "<username>"
  • template: "<username>@contoso.com"
  • Expression output: "[email protected]"

Example 3: Using regexPattern and replacementValue to extract a portion of the source string and replace it with an empty string or a custom value built using regex patterns or regex group names.

Let's say you have a source attribute telephoneNumber that has components country code and phone number separated by a space character. For example, +91 9998887777 Then in this case, you can use the following expression in your attribute mapping to extract the 10 digit phone number.

Replace([telephoneNumber], , "\\+(?<isdCode>\\d* )(?<phoneNumber>\\d{10})", , "${phoneNumber}", , )

  • source: [telephoneNumber] = "+91 9998887777"
  • regexPattern: "\\+(?<isdCode>\\d* )(?<phoneNumber>\\d{10})"
  • replacementValue: "${phoneNumber}"
  • Expression output: 9998887777

You can also use this pattern to remove characters and collapse a string. For example, the following expression removes parenthesis, dashes and space characters in the mobile number string and returns only digits.

Replace([mobile], , "[()\\s-]+", , "", , )

  • source: [mobile] = "+1 (999) 888-7777"
  • regexPattern: "[()\\s-]+"
  • replacementValue: "" (empty string)
  • Expression output: 19998887777

Example 4: Using regexPattern, regexGroupName and replacementValue to extract a portion of the source string and replace it with another literal value or empty string.

Let's say your source system has an attribute AddressLineData with two components street number and street name. As part of a recent move, let's say the street number of the address changed, and you want to update only the street number portion of the address line. Then in this case, you can use the following expression in your attribute mapping to extract the street number.

Replace([AddressLineData], ,"(?<streetNumber>^\\d*)","streetNumber", "888", , )

  • source: [AddressLineData] = "545 Tremont Street"
  • regexPattern: "(?<streetNumber>^\\d*)"
  • regexGroupName: "streetNumber"
  • replacementValue: "888"
  • Expression output: 888 Tremont Street

Here's another example where the domain suffix from a UPN is replaced with an empty string to generate login ID without domain suffix.

Replace([userPrincipalName], , "(?<Suffix>@(.)*)", "Suffix", "", , )

  • source: [userPrincipalName] = "[email protected]"
  • regexPattern: "(?<Suffix>@(.)*)"
  • regexGroupName: "Suffix"
  • replacementValue: "" (empty string)
  • Expression output: jsmith

Example 5: Using regexPattern, regexGroupName and replacementAttributeName to handle scenarios when the source attribute is empty or doesn't have a value.

Let's say your source system has an attribute telephoneNumber. If telephoneNumber is empty, you want to extract the 10 digits of the mobile number attribute. Then in this case, you can use the following expression in your attribute mapping.

Replace([telephoneNumber], , "\\+(?<isdCode>\\d* )(?<phoneNumber>\\d{10})", "phoneNumber" , , [mobile], )

  • source: [telephoneNumber] = "" (empty string)
  • regexPattern: "\\+(?<isdCode>\\d* )(?<phoneNumber>\\d{10})"
  • regexGroupName: "phoneNumber"
  • replacementAttributeName: [mobile] = "+91 8887779999"
  • Expression output: 8887779999

Example 6: You need to find characters that match a regular expression value and remove them.

Replace([mailNickname], , "[a-zA-Z_]*", , "", , )

  • source [mailNickname]
  • oldValue: "john_doe72"
  • replaceValue: ""
  • Expression output: 72

SelectUniqueValue

Function: SelectUniqueValue(uniqueValueRule1, uniqueValueRule2, uniqueValueRule3, …)

Description: Requires a minimum of two arguments, which are unique value generation rules defined using expressions. The function evaluates each rule and then checks the value generated for uniqueness in the target app/directory. The first unique value found is the one returned. If all of the values already exist in the target, the entry is escrowed, and the reason gets logged in the audit logs. There's no upper bound to the number of arguments that can be provided.

  • This function must be at the top-level and can't be nested.

  • This function can't be applied to attributes that have a matching precedence.

  • This function is only meant to be used for entry creations. When using it with an attribute, set the Apply Mapping property to Only during object creation.

  • This function is currently supported for use with these applications:

    • Workday to Active Directory User Provisioning
    • SuccessFactors to Active Directory User Provisioning
    • API-driven provisioning to on-premises Active Directory

    SelectUniqueValue isn't supported for use with other provisioning applications.

  • The LDAP search that SelectUniqueValue function performs in on-premises Active Directory doesn't escape special characters like diacritics. If you pass a string like "Jéssica Smith" that contains a special character, you'll encounter processing errors. Nest the NormalizeDiacritics function as shown in this example to normalize special characters.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
uniqueValueRule1 … uniqueValueRuleN At least 2 are required, no upper bound String List of unique value generation rules to evaluate.

Generate unique value for userPrincipalName (UPN) attribute

Example: Based on the user's first name, middle name and last name, you need to generate a value for the UPN attribute and check for its uniqueness in the target AD directory before assigning the value to the UPN attribute.

Expression:

    SelectUniqueValue( 
        Join("@", NormalizeDiacritics(StripSpaces(Join(".",  [PreferredFirstName], [PreferredLastName]))), "contoso.com"), 
        Join("@", NormalizeDiacritics(StripSpaces(Join(".",  Mid([PreferredFirstName], 1, 1), [PreferredLastName]))), "contoso.com"),
        Join("@", NormalizeDiacritics(StripSpaces(Join(".",  Mid([PreferredFirstName], 1, 2), [PreferredLastName]))), "contoso.com")
    )

Sample input/output:


SingleAppRoleAssignment

Function: SingleAppRoleAssignment([appRoleAssignments])

Description: Returns a single appRoleAssignment from the list of all appRoleAssignments assigned to a user for a given application. This function is required to convert the appRoleAssignments object into a single role name string. The best practice is to ensure only one appRoleAssignment is assigned to one user at a time. This function isn't supported in scenarios where users have multiple app role assignments.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
[appRoleAssignments] Required String [appRoleAssignments] object.

Split

Function: Split(source, delimiter)

Description: Splits a string into a multi-valued array, using the specified delimiter character.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String source value to update.
delimiter Required String Specifies the character that is used to split the string (example: ",")

Split a string into a multi-valued array

Example: You need to take a comma-delimited list of strings, and split them into an array that can be plugged into a multi-value attribute like Salesforce's PermissionSets attribute. In this example, a list of permission sets are populated in extensionAttribute5 in Microsoft Entra ID.

Expression: Split([extensionAttribute5], ",")

Sample input/output:

  • INPUT (extensionAttribute5): "PermissionSetOne, PermissionSetTwo"
  • OUTPUT: ["PermissionSetOne", "PermissionSetTwo"]

StripSpaces

Function: StripSpaces(source)

Description: Removes all space (" ") characters from the source string.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String source value to update.

Switch

Function: Switch(source, defaultValue, key1, value1, key2, value2, …)

Description: When source value matches a key, returns value for that key. If source value doesn't match any keys, returns defaultValue. Key and value parameters must always come in pairs. The function always expects an even number of parameters. The function shouldn't be used for referential attributes such as manager.

Note

Switch function performs a case-sensitive string comparison of the source and key values. If you'd like to perform a case-insensitive comparison, normalize the source string before comparison using a nested ToLower function and ensure that all key strings use lowercase. Example: Switch(ToLower([statusFlag]), "0", "true", "1", "false", "0"). In this example, the source attribute statusFlag may have values ("True" / "true" / "TRUE"). However, the Switch function always converts it to lowercase string "true" before comparison with key parameters.

Caution

For the source parameter, do not use the nested functions IsPresent, IsNull or IsNullOrEmpty. Instead use a literal empty string as one of the key values.
Example: Switch([statusFlag], "Default Value", "true", "1", "", "0"). In this example, if the source attribute statusFlag is empty, the Switch function returns the value 0.

Caution

Issue: The provisioning service incorrectly set an attribute value to null in the target system when using a switch statement.
Resolution: Use an IIF statement instead of a switch statement to prevent unexpected null values or use the IgnoreFlowIfNullOrEmpty function with the switch statement. For example, switch([companyName], "External", "Company A", "A", "Company B", "B") should be represented as IIF([companyName] = "Company A", "A", IIF([companyName] = "Company B", "B", "External")). In cases where the default value is an attribute, use an expression such as IgnoreFlowIfNullOrEmpty(switch([companyName], [companyName], "Company A", "A", "Company B", "B")).
Root cause: This issue is specific to scenarios where Microsoft Entra ID is the source system and the switch statement contains a default value.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String Source value to update.
defaultValue Optional String Default value to be used when source doesn't match any keys. Can be empty string ("").
key Required String Key to compare source value with.
value Required String Replacement value for the source matching the key.

Replace a value based on predefined set of options

Example: Define the time zone of the user based on the state code stored in Microsoft Entra ID. If the state code doesn't match any of the predefined options, use default value of "Australia/Sydney".

Expression: Switch([state], "Australia/Sydney", "NSW", "Australia/Sydney","QLD", "Australia/Brisbane", "SA", "Australia/Adelaide")

Sample input/output:

  • INPUT (state): "QLD"
  • OUTPUT: "Australia/Brisbane"

ToLower

Function: ToLower(source, culture)

Description: Takes a source string value and converts it to lower case using the culture rules that are specified. If there's no culture info specified, then it uses Invariant culture.

If you would like to set existing values in the target system to lower case, update the schema for your target application and set the property caseExact to 'true' for the attribute that you're interested in.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String Usually name of the attribute from the source object
culture Optional String The format for the culture name based on RFC 4646 is languagecode2-country/regioncode2, where languagecode2 is the two-letter language code and country/regioncode2 is the two-letter subculture code. Examples include ja-JP for Japanese (Japan) and en-US for English (United States). In cases where a two-letter language code isn't available, a three-letter code derived from ISO 639-2 is used.

Convert generated userPrincipalName (UPN) value to lower case

Example: You would like to generate the UPN value by concatenating the PreferredFirstName and PreferredLastName source fields and converting all characters to lower case.

ToLower(Join("@", NormalizeDiacritics(StripSpaces(Join(".", [PreferredFirstName], [PreferredLastName]))), "contoso.com"))

Sample input/output:

  • INPUT (PreferredFirstName): "John"
  • INPUT (PreferredLastName): "Smith"
  • OUTPUT: "[email protected]"

ToUpper

Function: ToUpper(source, culture)

Description: Takes a source string value and converts it to upper case using the culture rules that are specified. If there's no culture info specified, then it uses Invariant culture.

If you want to set existing values in the target system to upper case, update the schema for your target application and set the property caseExact to 'true' for the attribute that you're interested in.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
source Required String Usually name of the attribute from the source object.
culture Optional String The format for the culture name based on RFC 4646 is languagecode2-country/regioncode2, where languagecode2 is the two-letter language code and country/regioncode2 is the two-letter subculture code. Examples include ja-JP for Japanese (Japan) and en-US for English (United States). In cases where a two-letter language code isn't available, a three-letter code derived from ISO 639-2 is used.

Word

Function: Word(String,WordNumber,Delimiters)

Description: The Word function returns a word contained within a string, based on parameters describing the delimiters to use and the word number to return. Each string of characters in string separated by the one of the characters in delimiters are identified as words:

If number < 1, returns empty string. If string is null, returns empty string. If string contains less than number words, or string doesn't contain any words identified by delimiters, an empty string is returned.

Parameters:

Name Required/ Repeating Type Notes
String Required Multi-valued Attribute String to return a word from.
WordNumber Required Integer Number identifying which word number should return
delimiters Required String A string representing the delimiter(s) that should be used to identify words

Example: Word("The quick brown fox",3," ")

Returns "brown".

Word("This,string!has&many separators",3,",!&#")

Returns "has".


Examples

This section provides more expression function usage examples.

Strip known domain name

Strip a known domain name from a user's email to obtain a user name. For example, if the domain is "contoso.com", then you could use the following expression:

Expression: Replace([mail], "@contoso.com", , ,"", ,)

Sample input / output:

Generate user alias by concatenating parts of first and last name

Generate a user alias by taking first three letters of user's first name and first five letters of user's last name.

Expression: Append(Mid([givenName], 1, 3), Mid([surname], 1, 5))

Sample input/output:

  • INPUT (givenName): "John"
  • INPUT (surname): "Doe"
  • OUTPUT: "JohDoe"

Add a comma between last name and first name.

Add a comma between last name and first name.

Expression: Join(", ", "", [surname], [givenName])

Sample input/output:

  • INPUT (givenName): "John"
  • INPUT (surname): "Doe"
  • OUTPUT: "Doe, John"

Generate an ID for a user based on their Microsoft Entra object ID. Remove any letters from the ID and add 1000 at the beginning.

This expression allows you to generate an identifier for a user that starts with 1000 and is likely to be unique.

Expression: Join("", 1000, Replace(ConvertToUTF8Hex([objectId]), , "[a-zA-Z_]*", , "", , ))

Sample input/output:

  • INPUT: "00aa00aa-bb11-cc22-dd33-44ee44ee44ee"
  • OUTPUT: "100064303565343762312333930392343435612626135652636136306362633065346234"