Book Image

SharePoint Development with the SharePoint Framework

By : Jussi Roine, Olli Jääskeläinen
Book Image

SharePoint Development with the SharePoint Framework

By: Jussi Roine, Olli Jääskeläinen

Overview of this book

SharePoint is one of Microsoft's best known web platforms. A loyal audience of developers, IT Pros and power users use it to build line of business solutions. The SharePoint Framework (SPFx) is a great new option for developing SharePoint solutions. Many developers are creating full-trust based solutions or add-in solutions, while also figuring out where and how SPFx fits in the big picture. This book shows you how design, build, deploy and manage SPFx based solutions for SharePoint Online and SharePoint 2016. The book starts by getting you familiar with the basic capabilities of SPFx. After that, we will walk through the tool-chain on how to best create production-ready solutions that can be easily deployed manually or fully automated throughout your target Office 365 tenants. We describe how to configure and use Visual Studio Code, the de facto development environment for SPFx-based solutions. Next, we provide guidance and a solid approach to packaging and deploying your code. We also present a straightforward approach to troubleshooting and debugging your code an environment where business applications run on the client side instead of the server side.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Overview of packaging and deploying

As discussed in Chapter 1, Introducing SharePoint Online for Developers, packaging and deploying of SharePoint solutions has always been slightly too complex and error-prone.

With SharePoint 2007, 2010, and 2013, full-trust based solutions were the standard of the time for packaging customization. These files would hold a single XML-based manifesto that would say what is in the package, and it was left up to SharePoint to figure out just how to deploy assets and artifacts correctly.

In situations where SharePoint failed the deployment, it was left up to the developer, or even worse, the IT professional performing the deployment to clean up whatever was left behind. This produced all types of utilities, tools, and best practices on deployment order, and how to update your existing packages in production in order not to break anything else.

With SharePoint Framework, we're finally moving beyond this problematic approach, as each SharePoint Framework...