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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

Accessing real data with SPHttpClient

The standard approach to access and perform CRUD operations (Create - Read - Update - Delete) with SharePoint data is to use SPHttpClient. We did already use SPHttpClient when working with our first real web part in Chapter 4, Building your First Web Part. Next, we are going to be focusing more deeply on the use of SPHttpClient, but you should know that it is not the only way to work with SharePoint data while you are using the SharePoint Framework. SPHttpClient is built into the SharePoint Framework to perform REST calls against SharePoint, but you can do the REST calls using some other framework (e.g. jQuery) or simply using JavaScript's XMLHttpRequest object. In addition to REST-based approaches, you can use SharePoint JSOM, a JavaScript Object Model which is a subset of the SharePoint client-side object model first introduced in SharePoint 2010.

Using an object model instead of REST is a habit of SharePoint old-timers. Back in the good old...

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