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SharePoint Development with the SharePoint Framework

You're reading from   SharePoint Development with the SharePoint Framework Design and implement state-of-the-art customizations for SharePoint

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787121430
Length 386 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Jussi Roine Jussi Roine
Author Profile Icon Jussi Roine
Jussi Roine
Olli Jääskeläinen Olli Jääskeläinen
Author Profile Icon Olli Jääskeläinen
Olli Jääskeläinen
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing SharePoint Online for Developers FREE CHAPTER 2. Developing Solutions for SharePoint 3. Getting Started with the SharePoint Framework 4. Building Your First Web Part 5. Using Visual Studio Code and Other Editors 6. Packaging and Deploying Solutions 7. Working with SharePoint Content 8. Working with the Web Part Property Pane 9. Using React and Office UI Fabric React Components 10. Working with Other JavaScript Frameworks 11. Troubleshooting and Debugging SharePoint Framework Solutions 12. SharePoint APIs and Microsoft Graph 13. The Future of SharePoint Customizations

Developer sites versus team sites

A developer site has a few differences from regular team sites that you would typically provision for users. First and foremost, developer sites allow add-in sideloading. This is a method for developers to quickly deploy a custom-developed add-in for their site for testing, thus bypassing the safety procedures and possible governance models SharePoint Online admins tend to prefer in production environments.

As such, if you choose to develop your own add-in, you could deploy it directly to your own developer site. Later, when you are certain your add-in behaves as it should and is ready for production, you can submit the add-in to a separate site, called the Application Catalog, that admins use to provision the custom add-in for wider consumption.

Second, besides the add-in sideloading functionality, developer sites have a few quick links in the left-most navigation bar to aid in quickly navigating between core features within a developer site. The Apps in Testing link takes you to a list of add-ins you currently have sideloaded on your site so that you can quickly hop back and forth between multiple add-ins. Developer Center is a static link in Microsoft's own public Office Developer Portal at https://dev.office.com/docs. Samples are also a static link to Microsoft's public repository of sample code.

Don't worry about the navigation bar items or the overall look and feel of your developer site. The purpose of the site is to allow you to kickstart your add-ins for further testing, not to act as a landing site for your users to access your custom add-ins in the future. Typically developers re-create new developer sites when the need arises and might not use the same developer site eternally.

You have been reading a chapter from
SharePoint Development with the SharePoint Framework
Published in: Sep 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781787121430
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