Book Image

Implementing Microsoft SharePoint 2019

By : Lewin Wanzer, Angel Wood
Book Image

Implementing Microsoft SharePoint 2019

By: Lewin Wanzer, Angel Wood

Overview of this book

Microsoft’s latest addition to their product range, SharePoint Server 2019, is a new enterprise content management platform that brings on-premise collaboration features to life. It can be used as an isolated platform or in a hybrid connected configuration providing management and connectivity to Office 365. You can use the SharePoint framework to host sites, information, data, and applications in a robust CMS that centralizes collaborative content for enterprises. SharePoint 2019 enables new integrations and features that will allow you to work seamlessly with new and old Office products such as Microsoft Power Apps and other Microsoft Office applications. Implementing Microsoft SharePoint 2019 will help you understand the challenges, planning, migration steps, installation concepts, and configuration involved in providing this platform for your enterprise. The book will also show you what the platform brings to the table from an on-premise server perspective. If you’re new to SharePoint 2019, you’ll also be guided through how to get servers up and running so that you and your user community can become productive with this powerful new platform. By the end of this book, you’ll be well-versed in Microsoft SharePoint 2019 and have the knowledge you need to apply your skills in the real world.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Developer essentials

Since SharePoint 2019 is a big change from all other versions of SharePoint, there are things you need to know to move forward as a developer. As stated, we have seen so many changes over the years, especially between 2007, 2010, and 2013. These versions brought big functionality changes, which then brought development changes and changes to out-of-the-box functionality.

The same goes for this version; as you will see in this chapter, SharePoint 2019 is bringing the cloud SharePoint Online service to an on-premises environment. Although it's not patched and updated to the standard of the server used in the cloud, we do see most features available for developers. Admins do not have the same configuration features in the on-premises servers that support SharePoint Online. These features will probably never surface in an on-premises build. If they do, these features would be a great addition to environments that need administrative support.

The good thing...