►
From YouTube: SharePoint Dev Weekly - Episode 43 - 11th of June 2019
Description
SharePoint Dev Weekly is a weekly video chat where Vesa and Waldek are talking about the latest news and topics around the SharePoint dev area.
If you want your article or sample mentioned, please use the #SPDevWeekly hashtag on Twitter for letting us know.
This video was recorded on Friday 7th of June 2019.
You can find more details on the weekly summary from the SharePoint Dev blog from http://aka.ms/spdev-blog. More details on the SharePoint Dev community available from http://aka.ms/sppnp.
A
B
B
A
A
So
it
is
episode
43
and
just
for
everybody
who's
watching
these
things.
We're
not
gonna
actually
continue
doing
this
on
a
weekly
basis.
We
will
have
a
small
break
in
July.
We
based
on
after
discussions
during
this
week
with
the
with
the
NVB
crew
and
the
internal
max
of
people,
and
we
did
a
map
of
overlapping
how
the
vacations
are
when
we
realized
that.
Well,
this
doesn't
make
any
sense.
B
A
A
There's
a
different
set
of
focus,
there's
the
PMP
project,
BMP
new
kits
and
the
BMP
PowerShell
is
getting
released
on
a
monthly
basis
on
first
Friday
of
every
single
months.
Now
the
CLI
has
a
different
release
cycle
p.m.
PJs,
there's
a
slightly
different
release
cycle
and
all
that,
the
the
reason
why
we
actually
do
this
in
the
first
Friday
of
every
single
month
is
that
on
the
second
Tuesday
of
every
single
month,
we
have
a
monthly
community
call
and
they
were
gonna,
then
do
a
summary
on
what
has
happened
and
what
I.
C
A
B
C
C
B
C
B
A
C
A
C
A
A
A
A
C
C
A
C
A
C
A
And
just
to
be
clear
on
that
one
right
now
we're
still
it's.
It
is
actually
on
shape
on
the
engineering
side
of
the
the
house,
which
is
still
the
the
card
about
we're,
trying
to
make
things
happen,
and
it's
not
about
the
fact
that
we
would
be
unable
to
reference
the
stander
and
compile
the
things
it's
changes
inside
of
our
build
system
and
build
processes
which
are
actually
the
bottleneck,
so
that
takes
still
some
time
how
to
get
it
out.
It's
a
simple
thing:
the
implications
of
getting
it
out.
A
C
B
With
that
I
wanted
to
watch,
point
is
gonna,
be
like
you
know
the
CKY.
No,
no.
What
what
y2k
bug
you
know
like
everybody's
were
like
it's
gonna,
be
the
big
thing
and
then
midnight.
Nothing
was
good
right.
So
so
did
and
the
same
thing
here
like
everything,
oh
yeah,
it's
gonna
be
interesting
and
then
it
ships
and
at
worst
Evers
like
what
else.
A
B
B
So
you
guys
mentioned
the
naming
and
trying
to
think
about
like
what
would
you
rename
PNP
core
Corwin
as
becomes
to
the
core,
and
we
go
through
the
same
exercise
and
we
realized
that
so
is
CI
exists.
Now,
for
a
little
more
over
a
year
and
a
half,
and
over
time
we
get
heard
like
things
that,
if
you
put
them
next
to
each
other,
the
names
don't
match
or
variables
like
we.
B
We
we
we,
we
have
the
long
argument,
name
and
then
short
one
when
it
makes
sense
and
when
you
put
them
next
to
each
other,
they
not
always
aligned
or
the
command
name
sound
like
don't
really
match,
and
now
we
try
it.
Okay,
so
we're
plan
to
have
version
two,
which
is
a
chance
for
us
to
have
making
changes.
So
we
want
to
to
use
that
to
basically
realign
the
names
and
make
them
make
sense,
and
we
realized
that
naming
things
is
the
hardest
things
in
death
like
make
things
to.
C
B
Just
like
there
is
an
easy
way
around
it,
but
to
name
things
and
then
have
like
an
idea.
We
want
to
like.
The
way
we
want
to
approaches
is
to
come
with
okay.
So
this
is
how
we
name
things,
and
then
we
can
put
everything
against
there's
like
a
okay.
Does
this
make
sense?
Does
this
make
sense?
Does
this
make
sense
right
basically
to
have
to
start
from
the
idea
and
then
create
the
names
as
opposite
to
create
names
and
then
kind
of
liking
it,
and
it's
it's
tough,
because
there
are
exceptions.
B
A
B
Easier
because
there
is
a
fixed
list
of
verbs,
but
the
problem
is
that
sometimes
you
have
something
that
doesn't
really
match
the
verb,
but
you
have
to
do
like
that
square
peg
into
the
round
hole,
because
these
are
the
verbs
you
have
yeah
yeah,
so
we're
going
through
that
we're
trying
to
align
it.
But
now
you
mention
it.
It
almost
feels
like
you
know
what
doesn't
even
make
sense.
Is
it
worth
the
effort
because
it's
not
optional?
We
have
I
think
now,
oh
about
280
comments
and
trying
to
align
them
like
plan.
B
All
that
is
like
yeah
I
mean
I.
Have
a
pen
yeah.
B
A
A
B
C
A
A
B
A
C
A
Has
been
one
of
the
links
which
you
actual
released
six
hours
ago,
apparently
because
it
says
so
in
the
latest
version
is
to
tune
2019
release
related
on
one
organization
and
the
modernization.
Tooling
is
basically
your
baby.
To
be
honest,
you
you,
this
is
getting
really
difficult.
You
started
based
technically
the
whole
p.m.
patron.
It
started
with
you
when
you
end
may
actually
started
building
stuff
together
and
then
we
went
open
source
first,
internal
and
external,
and
then
it's
croon
from
there.
A
C
Care
is
because
meaning
B
is
Microsoft,
keep
on
shipping
great
yourself
and
you
features
new
finality
new
your
eyes,
but
well,
if
you
do
not
nothing
and
you
kind
of
stuck
with
your
oldest
technology
yo
you
and
mobilization
tools
and
guidance.
Is
there
to
help.
You
move
your
all
sides,
they're,
not
really
old,
but
they
look
old,
potentially
because
the
using
only
rival
ordinary
bees,
all
pages
and
people
want
to
use
a
consistent
experience
which
is
modern
and
and
that's
why
and
also
the
microsite.
C
We
invest
in
modern,
our
our
new
features
go
over
there
mainly
and
if
you
want
the
benefit
from
the
latest
and
greatest
you
have
to
be.
This
is
what
this
tools
and
guidance
will
help
you
do
so.
So
we
have
a
scanner
that
you
can
run
to
kind
of
understand.
Where
are
you
what
is
holding
you
back
to
go
to
more
than
which
things
do
you
need
to
fix,
yeah
and
then
you're?
C
The
main
thing
actually
is
everything
around
each
transformation
because
it
was
like
I
kept
inside
the
Microsoft
API,
since
that
next
offering
we
have
new
ice,
but
we
don't
have
a
way
to
get
you
there.
Yeah
project
came
up
actually
like
what
a
year
ago
for
bada
one
thing
is
about
one
year:
that's
now
that
this
exists
and
there's
evolved
a
lot
over
the
last
year's,
oh
yeah,.
A
C
C
Mobilizing
it
now,
just
before
you
think,
to
optimistic
meaning.
A
person
portal
is
a
complex
thing,
this
this
page
transformation,
so
it
would
always
have
to
kind
of
think
about
the
new
information
architecture
built
the
communication
size,
usurps,
use,
modern
site,
page
content
types,
but
once
you
doesn't
that
work,
take
the
old
page
and
boom
move
over
to
the
new
page
in
the
communication
site
and
what's
really
cool
actually,
is
that
we
can
actually
do
this
as
well
from
one
pram.
C
So
you
go
to
your
SharePoint
on
pram
publishing
portal,
2013
2016
2019,
you
connect
to
it,
read
the
page
and
move
it
over
to
a
convocation,
salad,
chef,
online,
directly,
no
hassle,
nothing
don't
have
to
fully
migrate
the
post.
The
first
one
is
a
classic
portal.
Then
to
demonisation
you
simply
can
lift
the
page
from
a
pram
and
ship
it
online,
which
is
something
that
whenever
no
one
does
feature
yeah.
C
C
C
Commandlets
we
just
cover
PD
client-side
page,
and,
although
that's
it,
it
will
happen,
it
would
even
copy
all
the
depending
acid.
So
if
your
on-prem
page
refers
to
an
image
living
in
the
same
side
collection,
we
just
grab
the
image
move
it
over,
put
it
inside
assets,
folder
of
the
communication
side,
and
so
you
get.
We
do
do
that.
We
do
your
cell
mapping
your
LD
names,
so
we
can
rewrite
the
URL,
so
they
don't
point
back
to
your
on-prem
environment
yep.
C
B
A
B
Thing
right,
because
a
so
in
the
past,
I
used
to
build
a
lot
of
internet
sites
or
SharePoint
and
like
one
of
the
things
that
you
could
do
in
publishing
size
was
to
have
a
content
type
with
different
fields
and
then
have
them
assigned
to
different
thing
and
then
show
them
all
over
the
page.
How
do
you
deal
with
that.
C
And
support
that
actually
other
features
that
we
added
actually
in
the
June
release,
is
being
able
to
use
the
page
properties
per
part.
So
come
here
generates
the
page
and
you
can
define
in
our
mapping
model
like
okay,
these
five
fields,
I
want
them
to
be
visible
on
the
page,
so
they
will
appear
in
the
page
properties
web
path
which
you
put
on
the
page.
You
choose
where
you
put
it,
which
column,
which
row
and
will
be
there.
B
A
And
what's
really
important
to
realize
as
well
that
it
actually
does
work
for
custom
web
parts
as
well?
Can
you
talk
about
that
one
so
because
I
think
one
of
the
lot
of
the
the
people
actually
have
custom
web
parts
built
using
from
solution
main
on
premise
this
and
then
there's
the
discussion
and
I.
Don't
know
I
can't,
but
I
can,
because
this
all
dates
are
here.
So
how
would
you
do
the
translation?
How
does
the
mapping
work
if.
C
Situation,
on-prem
webparts,
we're
proud,
is
business-critical.
You
still
needed
to
think
that's
the
first
question
like
don't
rewrite
anything.
Let's
assume
it's!
You
really
need
this
thingy.
You
will
share
poor,
framing
based
reports.
We
deploy
it
to
your
ship
online
environments
and
then
you
update
our
mapping
to
take
kind
of
say,
like
this
old
purpose,
which
has
a
particular
name,
your
namespace,
your
company
control
pseudo,
the.
A
C
Namespace
name
of
the
web
parts,
and
you
just
say
okay.
This
goes
now
to
my
new
customer.
We
define
our
mapping
filed
and
you
specified
a
custom
mapping
file,
and
that
should
be
it.
So
it's
really
extendable
and
flexible.
So
you
can
kind
of
do
everything
with
the
term.
Well,
that's
probably
too
much
you.
A
Maybe
one
more
thing
and
then
let's
go
to
the
door,
it
goes,
but
one
more
thing
kind
of
also
to
kind
of
maybe
potentially
reveal
we're
looking
into
actually
building
a
centralized
service
in
the
same
way
as
we
have
the
provisioning
service
for
doing
transformation
during
as
well
starting
from
autumn.
So,
let's
see
how
fast
we're
gonna
do
that
it's
gonna
be
free
community
treatment,
BMP
supported
we're
looking
into
also
solving
and
disability
discussions
on
all
of
this
stuff,
so
there
will
be
an
SLA
and
it
will
be
supported
whatever.
A
C
C
That
are
looking
into
can.
Can
they
actually
do
something
like
this
because
they
get
demands
from
their
customers?
Well,
like
people
want
to
modernize
and
they
go
to
the
typical
migration
partners
like
hey.
Can
you
make
this
ever
for
me?
So
we
might
see
other
kind
of
evolutions
in
the
direction
where
technology
becomes
more
mainstream,
which
will
help
the
broad
where.
A
We
then
work
we
as
a
Microsoft
work
together
with
these
partners
for
the
during
with
this
open
source
solution,
so
everybody
will
be
able
to
benefit
out
of
it
because
and
one
thing
to
realize
that
transformation
is
different
operations
and
migration.
Migration
contents
typically
doesn't
actually
take
your
customizations
with
you.
That's
my
creating
content,
so
transformation
of
the
functionality
is
a
completely
different
discussion.
That's
why
this
thing
actually
exists.
A
Now,
let's
actually
go
to
some
articles
and
let's
get
back
on
the
on
the
discussions
after
that,
as
well
good
discussion,
but
a
few
articles
to
go
through
from
this
week
and
there
was
actually
more
and
more
actually
again
happening
stuff.
For
the
past
weeks,
there
was
a
lot
of
conferences
which
reduced
the
definitely
the
what
was
happening
in
the
community,
but
this
one
was
really
good
from
Vera
Sakura
around
using
p.m.
PJs
and
creating
a
shipment
framework
web
part
with
crude
operations
with
that.
A
So
this
one
is
evolving
forward
and
the
version
2.0
is
coming
out
relatively
soon,
which
is
really
really
cool,
stuff
and
Brad
Patrick
at
a
session
last
week
in
was
it
last
week
last
week,
yes
in
Austria
Wiesbaden,
please
pardon
around
the
be
mph
at
the
MP
JSP.
It's
really
really
really
cool
stuff
so
and
it's
getting
insanely
widely
used
as
well.
I
think
we
had
10,000
tenants
in
every
single
month
using
PHAs
nowadays,
which.
C
A
Like
wow,
really
quite
quite
a
nice
milestone
for
a
well,
it's
close
to
10,000
here
can
I
hit
the
10000
pretty
soon
with
BTS,
but
nice
milestone
for
an
open-source
project,
absolutely
save
e-mails
to
sharepoint
with
Mike's
a
flow
flow.
Ninja
gianlu
Geneva
has
an
MVP
I,
think
he's
an
MVP
football
SharePoint
and
flow
unless
I'm
mistaken,
but
anyway,.
A
Everything
he
has
this
flows
to
the
app
which-
and
you
can
read
more
about
it
in
chums
chance,
talk
and
his
services,
but
basically
there's
a
more
complex
UI,
where
you
can
manage
more
easily
flows
in
single
UI,
rather
than
a
bit
just
what
you've
been
evolving
that
for
a
few
years
already.
But
John
is
a
master
of
love
absolutely,
and
this
good
example
of
a
story
where
how
do
you
save
your
important
emails
to
SharePoint
with
a
microscope?
A
So
when
the
email
is
arriving,
then
you
actually
take
that
email
and
save
that
to
a
safe
location
in
the
shipment,
which
would
be
then
a
centralized
location
for
storing
the
information.
Now.
Is
that
something
what
you
want
to
do
may
be
debatable,
and
this
is
one
way
of
actually
just
storing
important
emails
to
a
different
location.
A
But
again
it
shows
the
flexibility
of
the
flow
as
well,
not
a
massive
amount
of
things
to
do,
and
we
were
able
to
actually
save
that
email
as
a
file
inside
of
share,
so
teams
directory
using
SPF,
X
and
Microsoft
crafts
from
Robbie,
Williams,
really
cool
web
part.
So
our
heart
or
my
systems
tabs
and
something
was
quite
simple,
but
still
useful,
so
having
a
list
of
themes
available
and
then
clink
to
join
the
team.
A
So
you
can
easily
can
see
what
are
the
themes
which
are
available
in
the
organization
and
you
could
absolutely
host
the
same
piece
of
code
in
SharePoint
I
mean
in
as
much
names
down,
because
that's
really
easy,
absolutely
now
shape
and
api's
and
micro
flow
podcasts.
So
much
of
choices
for
developer
podcast.
A
If
you,
if
you're,
not
aware,
if
you
don't
follow
this
Jeremy
and
all
you
shoot
really
great
broadcast
podcast
series
and
on
the
latest
ones,
there
was
ship
and
Adi
discussions
and
a
craft
discussions
which
are
miquellee
and
Kathy
duties
and
Jeremy
Kathy
basically
owns
our
SharePoint
list
library
sites.
One
tribes
of
files/folders
API
is
in
Mike's
of
craft,
so
all
of
that
stuff,
which
is
evolving
and
it's
owned
by
Jeremy
and
Kathy.
A
In
the
background,
there's
a
really
great
discussion
and
have
a
look
on
definitely
other
Microsoft
resist
our
developer
podcast
in
general,
good
good
good
stuff.
Now
this
one
was
really
cool.
A
sharepoint
favor
bookmarklet,
two
or
four
curricula
is
the
debugging.
So
basically
how
you
can
really
easy,
then
I
do
yeah.
C
B
A
Next
article
next
article,
my
prints
are
exploding
they're
over
heading
overheating.
Already
it
is
actually
I
have
to
say
this.
It
is
apparently
34
35
degrees
in
my
office
right
now
it
is
insanely
hot
35
35.
Yes,
well,
it's
nothing
I'm,
so
I'm
used
to
sauna.
So
it
doesn't
really
matter
that
much
so
when
it's
70
I
don't
need
to
go
to
sauna
anymore.
There
we
go
now.
A
A
It
might
be.
Do
out-of-the-box
issues
likely
do
whatever
reasons
you
can
actually
get
a
list
of
those
using
what
would
be
the
publisher
off
getting
this
tester?
So
it's
a
fail
and
because
we've
used
then
this
to
reapply
beside
designs
if
they
have
been
fixed
or
or
confirmed
that
the
settings
and
configuration
have
been
applied
to
those
sites.
So
it
makes
perfect
sense
or.
A
What
supplies
officially
absolutely
absolutely
manager
and
then
as
same
also
from
a
be
around
how
I
got
more
involved
in
open
source,
and
this
is
actually
quite
nice-
article
related
on
on
the
challenges,
but
quite
often
people
are
having,
which
is
like
how
would
I
get
involved?
How
do
I
contribute?
How
do
I
is
my
sample
good
enough
and
answer
is
absolutely
it's
good
enough.
If
you
create
a
sample,
it
is
definitely
good
enough
for
getting
shirt.
B
A
And
actually
that's
a
good
discussion,
but
I
stopped
sharing
intentionally,
but
that's
it
really
awesome
discussion
point
on
the
on
the
fact
that
what
would
you
say
for
first
of
all,
what
would
you
say
for
the
people
who
are
then
saying
back?
No,
no,
it's
not
my
job
to
do
that
stuff.
It's
Microsoft
job
to
deliver
all
of
this
documentation
or
samples.
B
Well,
yes,
but
these
are
so
there
are
things
are
a
part
of
the
product,
and
you
can
you
can
expect
that
Microsoft
works
on
the
quality
of
that
the
uptime,
the
SLA
and
so
forth,
and
so
on,
but
there's
also
a
bigger
thing.
Another
part
of
things
that
we
community
build
like
PowerShell,
see
some
PNP
a
SGLI
controls
Jessen
for
matters
like
there's
plenty
of
that
and
sure
it
is
not
your
job,
but
if
everybody
thought
exactly
that
way,
nothing
would
be
done.
Like
would
be
nowhere
right.
C
C
A
We,
if
we
even
if
you
think
about
how
we
started
with
the
PMP
in
the
first
place,
the
whole
whole
thing
started
from
the
from
the
realization
of
this
is
stupid
and
we
need
to
change
how
we
do
business
and
how
do
we
share
the
code
first
internally
and
then
externally,
because
it
was
idiotic
and
no
friends.
I'm
not
gonna,
go
details
on
on
the
on
the
on
the
cases
and
everything
else,
but
back
in
when
it
was
a
2006
2013.
Everything.
A
A
And
we
changed
and
how
do
we
change
this?
If
you
think
about
how
do
we
make
to
change
this?
That
we
are
the
people
who
are
setting
example
I'm,
not
saying
that
we
are
the
people
in
this
code.
We
are
the
people
who
are
watching
this
video
we're
the
people
who
are
contributing
with
other
people
who
are
actively
contributing
into
open
source
community
and
making
the
change
happen
and
that's
that's.
We
can
actually
see
the
change.
A
We
can
see
the
chains
even
in
the
way
how
Microsoft
is
now
ways
nowadays
behaving
and
messaging
stuff
and
and
promoting
the
open
source
and
because
it
has
a
massive
impact
for
the
ecosystem.
Now,
if
there
are
people
who
don't
have
a
time
and
are
there
in
that
interested
on
contributing,
you
don't
have
to,
but
definitely
you
can
reuse
the
stuff
anyway,
but
then
we
absolutely
welcome
people
to
be
more
involved.
Also,
I
want
to
call
our
David
Warner.
A
C
A
real
good
native,
actually
sometimes
q-tip,
might
be
a
barrier.
There
might
be
some
technical,
absolutely
keep
you
back,
especially
if
you're
not
a
developer
per
se.
But
then,
if
you
like
in
a
person
using
example,
partial
seal
I-
and
you
have
an
issue
like
sometimes
it's
hard
to
fix
something
because
you
don't
know
how
to
do
it,
but
yeah
like
that.
But.
C
A
Your
feedback,
what
was
actually
kind
of
kind
of
a
cute
example
of
the
power
of
the
open
source
as
well.
It's
it's
not
a
necessary
good
example
from
Microsoft
perspective
or
engineering
perspective,
but
these
things
do
happen.
So
when
it
was
it
two
weeks
ago,
three
weeks
ago,
there
wasn't
a
restriction
such
before
Germany.
C
A
There
was
a
small
accident,
a
human
error
and
code
was
actually
checked
in
which
was
causing
an
issue
related
on
content
types
in
SharePoint
Online.
But
what
was
really
interesting
around
that
resolution
was
that
big
we
actually
were
able
to
fix
and
provide
a
workaround
for
that
using
the
open
source
channels
faster.
A
Then
the
engineering
would
be
able
to
roll
out
the
fix
on
a
server
side,
so
we
were
able
to
provide
an
update
at
Newgate
package
in
matter
of
it's
to
be
available
for
everybody
who
was
running
into
that
which
was
actually
had
a
burqa
round
and
then,
at
the
same
time,
engineering
was
already
fixing
the
issue
and
rolling
out
to
that
180,000
servers
which
takes
time
it's
not
a
snap
of
a
finger.
So
that
was
really
an
good
example
of
the
power
of.
A
But
yeah
that's
a
good
example
of
the
power
of
the
community
and
so
and
more
and
more
we're
saying
these
kind
of
similar
stories,
so
the
community,
the
the
stuff.
What
we
do
in
community
is
getting
people
unblocked
as
an
example.
Just
a
simple
example:
CLI
is
a
good
example.
I
still
love
the
story
that
it
basically
started
from
the
fact
that,
well,
it
started
from
the
article
which
I
wrote
which
was
around.
This
is
how
you
use
office
365
CDN,
to
get
over
here.
A
C
A
A
B
B
So
so
it's
like
the
things
that
they
do
in
Azure
you
can.
You
always
have
the
choice
of
power,
shell
or
CLI,
no
matter
if
you're
run
it
yourself
or
even
in
the
the
cloud
shell
that
they
have
available,
you
still
have
you
always
have
the
choice
you
want
to
do
this.
You
can
do
that.
You
want
to
do
this
right
and
then,
in
the
end,
it's
up
to
you,
your
personal
preference
or
skills,
whether
you
use
the
one
or
the
other
yeah.
C
B
A
B
C
A
A
C
A
B
A
A
Keep
modernizing,
writes
SPX
stuff.
We
have
awesome
stuff
with
you,
I'm,
not
gonna
snap,
my
fingers,
because
in
the
movie
something
bad
happened
when
he
was
nothing
his
fingers
right
for
those
who
are
watching
these
things.
I
haven't
actually
seen
that
the
end
game.
Yet
no
me
neither
I'm
yeah,
so
don't
blow
it.
We
don't
want
to
see
the
outcome,
I'm
waiting
you
to
come
to
the
DVD
or
to
rental
so,
which
should
happen
hopefully
soon
anyway,
have
a
nice
weekend
and
you're
watching
this,
probably
starting
from
Tuesday.
So
have
a
nice.
A
Exactly
but
keep
modernizing,
keep
doing
SharePoint
framework
keep
on
giving
us
feedback.
If
you
want
your
article
being
mentioned
on
these
things
and
discussed
about
du
hast
attack
SP
that
weekly,
so
we
know
about
what
you're
writing
so
let
us
know
but
hopefully
enjoyed
on
this
one.
Thank
you.
Bye,
bye,.