Book Image

Microsoft SharePoint 2010 development cookbook

By : Ed Musters
Book Image

Microsoft SharePoint 2010 development cookbook

By: Ed Musters

Overview of this book

<p>There is a heavy demand in the marketplace for SharePoint developers that you could take advantage of - if only you had the opportunity to acquire the relevant skills! But, SharePoint 2010 is a big old product with a steep learning curve &ndash; where do you begin? <br /><br />This book has been designed to take the experienced ASP.NET developer from &ldquo;beginner&rdquo; to &ldquo;professional&rdquo; SharePoint developer in the shortest amount of time. You will be productive on you very first SharePoint development assignment with the knowledge and skills that you learn here. You will have distilled the essence of the author&rsquo;s many years of training, and leading development teams in SharePoint. <br /><br />This book uncovers the most common &ldquo;pattern&rdquo; of typical SharePoint development tasks encountered in the real world and puts the topics in a logical order with detailed step-by-step recipes for you to follow. <br />The practical example given builds and flows throughout the chapters and topics. By the end of this book, you will be able to apply the concepts to the challenges ahead of you!</p>
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Microsoft SharePoint 2010 Development Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Introduction


The purpose of SharePoint lists is to store data. This may be information in the form of a contacts list about your customers or the document library we previously created to store proposals (Microsoft Office documents in general). As a SharePoint developer, you will want to access the data both within the SharePoint environment – but equally importantly from outside the SharePoint environment. For example, you may have a Windows Forms application, Windows Presentation Foundation application, a Silverlight (Rich Internet) application, or a regular web application in which you are using JavaScript. And in these applications, you may need to access data that is in fact stored within one of your SharePoint site collections.

In the example for this chapter, let us say we are interested in the Top 5 proposals from our Proposals library – ranked in descending order by dollar value.