►
Description
SharePoint Dev Weekly is a weekly video chat where Vesa and Waldek are talking about the latest news and topics around SharePoint dev area. This week Patrick Rodgers (Microsoft) joined with a special guest appearance from one of his rabbits (last minutes of the video).
If you want your article or sample mentioned, please use #SPDevWeekly hashtag on Twitter for letting us know.
This video was recorded on Monday 14th of January 2019.
You can find more details on the weekly summary and links to covered topics from the SharePoint Dev blog from http://aka.ms/spdev-blog. More details on the SharePoint Dev community available from http://aka.ms/sppnp.
B
A
A
A
A
B
B
B
A
C
A
B
But
no,
we
dissolve
yeah,
but
no.
We
got
dissolved
because
we
got
merged
into
fast-track,
so
Microsoft
fast
track
is
I,
don't
know
what
to
call
a
division
group
organization
that
helps
folks
migrate
quickly,
hopefully
and
easily,
hopefully
into
office
365
across
not
just
SharePoint
but
all
the
various
workloads.
So
that's
what
I'm
doing
now,
though,
I'm
still
very
focused
on
SharePoint
and
have
been
part
of
now,
the
SharePoint
PNP
stuff.
For
what
three
or
four
and.
B
Into
the
cat
team
was
I
started,
I
had
decided,
I
I
wasn't
enjoying
my
current
position,
so
I
wanted
to
find
a
new
position
and
I
decided
the
way
I
was
gonna
do
that
was
we
have
at
Microsoft
all
these
internal
distribution
lists
like
it
many
companies,
but
you
know
at
Microsoft,
there's
500
people
on
these
random
little
distribution
lists,
but
there's
one
of
them
for
what
was
it
called
at?
The
time
was
like
office,
apps
programming
or
something
and
I
decided.
I
was
going
to
answer
every
question
on
that
distribution
list.
B
So
I
did
and
it
actually
worked
it.
So
you
know
get
involved
in
the
things
you
want
to
be
part
of,
but
it
led
to
folks
knowing
me
from
from
that
work
of
the
distribution
of
us
to
get
on
what
was
at
the
time
the
JDP
team,
which
was
a
sort
of
a
virtual
team
that
was
helping
people
migrate,
specific
to
SharePoint.
So
that
was
a
long.
A
B
So,
anyway,
that
way
I'll
sit
in
the
back
and
we
were
not
paying
attention.
We
were
talking
and
face,
and
I
came
up
with
the
idea
of
we
had
everybody's
familiar
with
at
this
point
that
the
P
and
P
site
score
the
seesaw
managed
core
library.
We
had
that
and
we
had
the
PowerShell
and
those
are
kind
of
the
two
big
and
the
provision
engine,
obviously
part
of
all
that,
but
we
didn't
have
any
client
side
stuff
at
all.
B
B
B
Is
the
first?
This
is
the
first
look
at
it
outside
of
the
product
teams.
Sorry
I
brought
in
a
bunch
of
MVPs
and
I
had
just
gotten
hired,
so
I
got
an
invite
somehow
and
then
Jeff.
My
now
manager
Jeff
invited
me
to
come
out,
and
so
we
hung
out
at
that.
But
we
came
up
the
idea,
then
of
like
we
have
a
JavaScript
core
library
like
we
do
for
the
other
stuff,
and
so
we
started
the
team
PJs
and
what
now
two
plus
years
later
tada
it's
a.
B
And
I
think
part
of
that
is
just
SPF.
X's
new
SharePoint
developers
are
transitioning
right
from
managed
code
to
client-side
dev.
We
were
new
to
it,
I
mean
I'd
done
JavaScript
and
stuff
in
the
past,
but
nobody
had
done
sheriff
like
framework
because
it
didn't
exist.
That
was
new
and
a
learning
curve,
and
then
we,
what
a
year
and
a
half
ago,
we
started
tracking
the
requests
coming
in
which
we
do
for
the
C
song
we
do
for
the
PowerShell.
Do
we
do?
We
do
for
the
CLI
right,
yeah.
B
You
know
that's
great
we're
doing
great
and
then
we
kind
of
were
there
for
a
while,
like
we
had
1
2
million
requests
a
month
and
then
maybe
three
then
back
down
to
two
and
then
all
of
a
sudden
at
hockey-stick,
Don
us
and
it
just
went
up
and
up
and
up
and
now
we're
over
about
two
billion
a
month.
Yep.
A
Early,
it's
multiple
entries,
even
in
a
second
in
the
worldwide,
which
is
pretty
cool
so
and
sister
again
clarify
how
we're
tracking
this
is
that
we're
heading
adding
a
additional
hitter
in
all
of
the
incoming
HTTP
calls.
So
we're
able
to
then
go
and
do
a
query
on
another
side
on
the
SharePoint
law.
Sharepoint
online
looks
and
say:
hey
dear
sharepoint,
online
logs,
which
is
quite
a
lot
of
data.
Can
you
give
me
the
number
related
on
those
requests
where
a
hitter,
so
they
were
able
to
do
the
calculations
on
the
answer.
B
Just
to
be
super
safe
goes
through
all
the
normal
Microsoft
PII
scrubbing.
You
can't
see.
We
can't
see
even
the
real
URL
requests
are
from
we.
We
can
see
what
tenon
it
was
in,
which
is
how
we
get
the
breakdown
of
number
of
tenants,
but
but
nothing
else.
Yes,
it's
just
really
draw
numbers,
but
cannot
blow
growth.
A
B
That's
yeah
and
I
always
say
just
thank
you.
That's
to
everybody,
obviously
out
there
in
the
community,
using
the
library
and
participating
and
helping
to
make
it
better
with
their
pull
requests
and
feedback.
So
really
it's
it's
a
huge
thank
you
to
all
those
folks.
I
mean
we
might
have
got
it
started,
but
it's
really
a
community
project
at
this
point.
So
that's
very
exciting.
A
That's
how
it
always
works,
that's
how
open-source
actually
works.
So,
although
there
has
to
be
the
one
person
like
in
the
case
of
one
deck
on
the
office,
365
CLI,
leading
that
there
forward
and
pushing
it
forward,
but
then
at
some
point,
whenever
it's
mature
enough
room,
it's
just
charts,
leaving
its
own
thing
right
and
before
you
get
to
that
moment,
you
will
go
through
denial,
frustration,
anger,
kind
of
a
I,
don't
I'm
too
tired
of
this.
Nobody
cares
and
you
just
keep
on
pushing
towards
that.
The.
C
A
A
B
Ok,
this
is
this
is
an
8
foot
by
4
foot
or
sorry
12
foot
by
4
foot
chalkboard
that
I
got
that
I
thought
would
be
really
awesome
to
put
on
my
wall
of
my
office
and
then
we
moved
to
this
house
and
you
can't
really
tell
but
the
the
ceilings
are
shorter
and
they
curve
on
the
corner
so
I've.
Nowhere
to
put
it
so,
it's
just
been
sitting
there
since
we
just
kind
of
cover
years
ago,
for
you.
C
C
Other
than
that,
we
had
a
curious
request
and
I
think
we
mentioned
that
already
in
the
past.
Somebody
who
is
on
SPO
D
wants
to
see
ally,
but
then
there's
the
thing
with
that
in
SPO
D
you
can
use
your
own
URLs
and
then,
like
I,
don't
know
now
we
assume
that
all
URLs
towards
we
would
communicate
and
with
dot
SharePoint
calm
and.
A
A
C
A
Make
sense
make
sense
now
on
my
side,
plenty
of
random
topics.
One
thing
what's
interesting,
which
will
go
live
later
today
later
not
today,
lit
this
week
is
a
updated
set
of
SharePoint
framework,
training,
videos
and
materials.
So
we're
looking
really
and
I
will
make
a
big
announcement
on
that
one,
because
we
really
want
to
make
sure
that
people
understand
that
we
have
tens
and
tens
of
hours
of
SharePoint
framework
training
material
for
free
plus
presentation,
plus
hands-on
labs
plus
demos.
A
So
anybody
in
the
world
can
actually
establish
their
own
training
package
and
start
delivering
that
internally
for
their
company
or
even
externally.
So
what
we
need
to
figure
out?
How
do
we
support
if
there's
any
questions
related
on
the
on
the
materials
but
and
that's
the
easiest
way
to
schedule,
really
help
people
to
read
well,
first
of
all,
read
and
consume
the
material
by
themself
if
needed,
but
also
if
they
want
to
redeliver
help
them
to
redeliver,
so
I
think
there's
a
massive
amount
of
still
kind
of
a
SharePoint
developers.
B
Then
you
know
once
it
gets
set
up,
we'll
have
the
the
online
provisioning
stuff
from
P
&
P,
so
you'll
be
able
from
that
to
provision
directly
into
your
tenant
training,
materials
and
those
training.
Materials
are
actually
housed
on
github
maintained
on
github
and
then
the
web
parts
that
get
installed
in
your
farm
will
auto
pool
latest
training
content.
So
is
gonna,
be
a
neat
thing
once
that
gets
going
and
that's
piloted
with
a
couple
customers
we're
still
working
out
the
kinks
there,
but
that's
going
to
be
a
super
cool
shoot
and
I.
B
B
A
That
one
as
well
so
it's
a
small
world,
surprise
surprise
on
many
of
these
things
now
being
conscious
about
the
time.
I
know
that
waldek
has
a
hard
stop
at
half
past.
So
if
we
will
go
along
on
the
on
the
articles,
then
you'll
just
disable.
Just
let
me
actually
share
my
screen
articles
because
there's
certain
things
which
we
wanted
to
actually
talk
still
to
cater
and
there's
one
specific
slide
which
I
wanted
to
actually
talk
with.
A
You
guys,
as
well
now,
first
of
all
few
kind
of
a
updates
for
this
week,
so
San
Diego
ship
on
Saturday
isn't
this
week
in
California
and
they
have
a
pretty
nice
set
of
people.
Well,
typically,
ship
on
Saturdays
has
a
massive
good
list
of
speakers
here
and
then
home
as
an
example
is
in
they're,
probably
doing
a
keynote
on
that
one
or
two
is
there
just
plenty
of
other
people
said
Matthews
and
everybody
else
in
San
Diego
now
there
is
also
sent
Lewis
Chevron
Saturday
this
weekend.
A
Awesome
set
of
speakers
here
as
well
and
so
talking
about
different
set
of
different
ways
of
customize
and
share
ponder
using
SharePoint
or
user
adaption
of
office
raises
to
five
or
Mike's
of
teams,
and
so
on.
So
and
more
and
more
with
the
power
apps
and
flows
content
covered
in
these
as
well,
which
makes
perfect
sense
so
because
it
is
overlapped
in
so
heavily
and
David.
Warner
is,
as
an
example,
instant
son
Lewis
from
a
depth
perspectives
of
deaf
people
who
are
participating
in
our
stuff
ship
and.
A
Customized
modern
sites
with
SPF
expect
ports
and
plugins
interesting
stuff,
oh
cool
stuff,
now
also
in
Europe
site.
There
is
a
share
point
yep
and
office
traces
for
user
group
meeting
in
Glasgow
tomorrow
Tuesday.
So
this
call
will
actually
live
few
hours
before
this
one.
So
it
will
be
a
tough
call.
If
you
see
this
Rickman,
you
gotta
get
to
your
car
and
drive.
A
A
Okay,
so
that
was
kind
of
the
the
community
stuff
during
this
week,
but
now
I'm
on
the
actual
stuff
or
actual
stuff,
that's
actual
stuff
as
well,
but
for
the
new
articles
there
was
a
really
cool
stuff
from
mokopuna.
Maki
Miko
has
created
the
site
designer
io.
We
actually
covered
this
one
in
one
of
our
episodes.
Waybad.
C
A
This
designer
at
fields
and
that's
structures,
and
it
actually
helps
you
to
create
them
and
then
you're
able
to
take
that
into
your
channels,
so
super
cool
stuff,
new
version
available
completely
open
source
as
well,
and
have
a
look
on
done,
and
it's
good
to
say
that
it's
getting
a
lot
of
love
from
the
community
as
well.
Now
we
wanted
to
this
is
the
thing
what
I
wanted
to.
B
I
do
just
want
to
say
real,
quick
on
that.
It
blows
my
mind
this
stuff
folks
out
there
in
the
community
are
coming
up
with
like
this.
The
work
Chris
Ken
has
done
with
like
the
list,
format
or
stuff
like
folks,
are
making
amazing
tools
and
just
giving
them
to
the
community.
It's
really
amazing
to
see
and
really
fantastic
stuff,
so
kudos
to
everybody.
A
B
A
C
A
Api
interface
is
actually
the
proxy
for
the
Microsoft
craft
and
we
had
a
really
interesting
discussion
last
week
with
AC
and
well.
They
can
and
Patrick
and
anima
coil
in
the
in
the
in
the
core
team
having
a
discussion
related
on
what
does
it
mean
and
how
does
it
actually
work?
And
and
what
does
it
mean
that
I
can
use
the
v2
REST
API
rather
than
cram
and
I
think
the
easiest
way
to
explain
this
is
by
using
a
slide.
So
let's
actually
do
that.
Yes,
I
was
successful.
A
So
this
is
kind
of
a
I'm,
not
gonna,
go
technical
details
on
the
architectural
details,
everything
else,
but
think
of
this
as
a
logical
design,
how
things
actually
works-
and
this
is
the
SharePoint
remote
APIs
architecture,
so
we
have
obviously
the
REST
API,
the
classic
restate
the
underscore
API,
where
we
have
underscore
API
web
and
get
lists
and
get
lists
and
all
of
those
classic
REST
API
model.
This
is
something
which
was
introduced
originally
in
SharePoint
2013,
technically
2010
actually
had
some
rest
operations,
but
that
was
still
a.
How
would
a
good
at
the
preview?
A
And
then
three
years
later
it
was
a
proper
API
which
people
which
was
used
by
the
product
as
well.
Now
then,
at
some
point,
this
has
access
lists
now,
what
five
to
six
years
already
right
and
maturity
of
the
SharePoint
UI
elements
are
clearly
hitting
this
API,
because
it's
it's,
the
the
the
equivalent
on
the
server
side
as
offering
api's
and
functionalities
for
the
SharePoint
you
eyes,
but
then
I
have
the
krafayis.
So
the
graph
API
is
is
something
which
is
relatively
well
relatively
new.
A
Now,
whenever
we
introduced
a
graph,
API
is
what
was
the
decision
in
general,
in
Microsoft,
Anna
or
in
the
ODSP
is
then
well
technically
we
could
offer
the
v1
REST
API
is
true
the
craft
as
well,
but
they
are
not
consistent,
they're,
not
really
designed
using
the
craft
of
thinking
the
craft
model,
the
craft
structure.
So
what
happened
was
that
they
actually
introduced
REST
API
v2,
which
is
the
one
which
is
actually
responsible
of
the
actual
server
air
or
server-side,
calls
around
the
ship
one.
A
So
there
is
a
separate
set
of
API
s
which
are
designed
to
offer
the
need
at
ABI
is
which
the
craft
API
is
of
offering
so
to
have
is
actually
just
a
layer
around
authentication.
And
how
do
you
access
the
information
in
SharePoint,
Orion,
planner
or
in
themes
or
in
whatever
so
the
graph
API
layer
is,
are
relatively
actually
more?
It's
the
unified
authentication
and
the
standards
around
how
we
should
implement
stuff
and
then
ODSP,
meaning
one
chairmanship.
A
One
team
is
then
responsible
of
the
files
and
slides
and
lists
API
is
related
on
craft
right
now.
What
Nichols
article
is
now
saying
is
that
well,
this
is
the
typical
options
classically
and
one
or
two
you
either
use
the
craft
if
that's
suitable
for
you
or
use
the
number
number
one
route
with
systole
the
API.
But
technically
it
is
supported
to
call
directly
REST
API
v2,
which
is
the
proxy
which
would
technically
created
for
the
craft,
also
known
as
a
room,
which
we
it's
an
internal
code
and
which
we
don't
actually
externally.
A
A
B
A
And
the
SharePoint
authentication
is
its
kind
of
an
adaption
of
a
form
based
authentication
at
some
point.
It
was
and
then
it's
it's
using
a
different
identity
model
than
the
azure
ad.
You
are
able
to
get
across
the
identities
and
off
using
refresh
tokens,
but
it's
different
so,
but
if
you
would
like
to
just
hit
the
the
standard
pressed
API
without
going
to
asha
ad
permission
and
scopes
and
resources,
you
can
actually
do
that
using
the
root
number
tree
in
the
slide
and
that's
what
because
most
article
is
actually
talking
about
kind
of
makes
sense.
A
A
B
The
v1
API
gets
generated,
I
mean,
is
a
little
inside
information
because
generated
directly
from
the
server
source
code,
and
so
we're
never
gonna
engineer
something
to
generate
a
graph
standard.
Api
from
this
other
model,
it'd
be
regenerating
the
entire
cogeneration
model,
which
I
I
don't
see
us
investing
in
yeah.
B
Well,
the
v2
that
I
said
the
big
win
in
my
opinion,
is
you
get
off
to
the
graph
without
having
to
do
all
the
extra
login
token
Handler
and
on
side,
even
though
with
SPF
X
as
of
what
1.6
that
got
super
easy
with
the
new
graph
clients
and
it's
open
token
provider
stuff?
It's
super
easy
to
call
graph
now,
yeah.
A
Exactly
but
now
from
a
API,
URL
perspective
and
rest
a
URL
perspectives,
and
we
can
actually
say
that
if
we
have
a
craft
API
URL
is
this
one,
so
the
SharePoint
URL
is
actually
this
one.
So
if
it
technically
doesn't
matter
either
one
of
you
did
this
hit
from
a
request
perspective,
it
will
be
exactly
the
same
code
which
is
executing
and
giving
you
the
results.
The
difference
like
Patrick,
you
said,
is
the
authentication
model.
What
this
need
to
be?
What
do
we
need
to
have
authenticated
against
to
be
able
to
access
the
API
call?
A
Now
ether
can
use
craft
used
craft
because,
especially
if
your
functionality
is
working
outside
of
SharePoint,
which
is
always
a
good
thing
or
a
cool
thing,
because
then
you're
combining
data
from
other
sources
as
well
then
use
the
craft
is
possible.
But
again,
if
you
want
to
make
things
simple
and
you
have
a
simplistic
requirement
to
do
something
simple:
yes,
you
can
use
the
v2
API
and
bypass
structure,
ad
authentication,
dance
and.
B
Do
remember
to
if
you're
doing
a
be
off
you
can
set
up
your
ad
permissions
such
that
you
can
call
SharePoint.
So
you
can
set
up
your
ad
tokens.
You're
gonna,
get
back
that
you
can
call
graph
and
SharePoint
v1
and
all
the
other
things
with
just
that
one
token.
So,
but
then
you're
not
using
the
SharePoint
auth
necessarily
you're,
using
your
they
be
off,
but
that
can
be
a
cleaner
solution
and
can
work
various
places
instead
of
just
on
SharePoint
yep.
A
Absolutely
absolutely
now,
hopefully
that
clarifies
slightly
the
designs
and
architecture.
What
we're
having
now,
let's
go
to
the
other
community
articles.
This
one
is
from
Joel.
Joel
actually
has
two
entries
this
week,
so
he's
been
blocking
actively
at
a
Google
Analytics
on
a
SharePoint
morin
page,
and
this
is
around
nice
article
around
how
you
can
actually
add
the
Google
Analytics
and
then
how
do
you
handle
the
navigated
events
in
the
right
way
in
the
Google
Analytics,
so
that
the
tracking
codes
and
your
current
page
and
the
URLs
are
getting
tracked?
Probably
so.
A
This
is
kind
of
a
evolution
on
something
we've
seen
in
the
past
as
well.
I
think
he
was
referencing,
cha-cha
rios
Ferrara's,
original
blog
post
and
then
evaluate
well
further.
Enhancing
that
sample
with
the
with
this
information
in
here
I
think
he
submitted
also
an
update
on
on
the
community
samples,
which
is
extremely
helpful.
Now
the
second
from
Joe
I
was
around
SPF
ik
solution
using
p.m.
peaches
to
consume
project
online
rest,
api's,
I,
don't
know
if
a
Patrick
seen
this
probably
have
actually.
B
Yeah
so
I
have.
This
is
something
that's
been
in
progress
for
a
little
while
now,
Powell
Powell
had
asked
I,
don't
know
four
or
five
months
ago
now
about
adding
project,
support
to
the
PBS
family
of
things
and
I
said
fantastic,
yes,
and
he's
been
working
on
that
it's
not
been
merged
into
the
main
stuff.
Yet
I
think
he's
still
trying
to
finalize
some
things.
But
this
article
is
a
great
little
blog
post,
but
it
does
talk
about
how
to
go.
B
Install
the
stuff
from
Powell's
pile
I
feel
like
I'm
butchering
how
about
I'm
butchering
that
and
I
apologize
from
his
github
Fork.
So
you
can
actually
go
to
his
Fork
and
install
the
project
stuff
and
use
it
with
the
caveat
that
it's
not
quite
merged
into
the
main
branch.
Yet
it
will
be
as
soon
as
he
gets
it
where
he
thinks
it's
good
to
go
and
simple
request
will
get
that
merged
in
because
I'm
excited
I.
B
Haven't
myself
tried
this
out
yet
just
because
I
know
he's
been
working
on
it
and
time
just
hasn't
really
permitted
me
to
mess
with
it
yet.
But
it's
gonna
be
really
exciting.
To
get
this
merged
in
and
open
up
a
whole
new
world
of
things
for
project
server,
folks
I
know
this
is
maybe
not
as
widely
used
a
sure
point,
but
I
know
there's
a
lot
of
folks
that
have
used
project
server,
and
this
is
a
great
really
great
example
for
P
and
P.
Guess.
B
I
just
want
to
say
if
you
have
ideas
for
bigger
changes
like
this,
so
this
is
adding
a
whole
new
library
to
that
set
of
libraries
right,
big
big
change,
reach
out
to
us.
First
we'd
love
to
talk
to
you
about
it
and
the
only
reason
we
want
to
do
that
is
not
to
sort
of
judge
your
idea,
but
so
we
know
it's
coming
and
we
can
help
you
shape.
B
So
this
is
fantastic
and
I'm
really
excited
to
get
this
merged
in
and
get
this
joined
in,
but
he
reached
out
to
us.
We
had
a
quick
chat
about
it.
He
created
an
issue
in
the
list.
You
can
set
issues
still
sitting
there,
so
you
can
go
look
at
that
issue
and
you
can
just
see
we
were
basically
like
hey.
This
sounds
like
an
awesome
idea.
B
Great,
let
us
know
how
it's
going
and
and
but
if
you
have,
if
you're
sitting
there
at
home-
and
you
have
big
ideas
like
this-
whether
it's
project,
server
or
I,
don't
know
pick
pick
another
Microsoft
technology
or
even
an
on
Microsoft
technology
potentially,
and
you
think
that'd
be
a
good
addition
to
the
libraries
reach
out
and
we'd
love
to
talk
about
it.
And
maybe
it's
not
a
good
fit
but
we'd
love
to
hear
we'd
rather
hear
the
idea
and
get
a
chance
to
talk
about
it
and
have
potentially
somebody
just
feel
like
we're.
A
A
Absolutely
absolutely
good
stuff,
really
really
good
stuff.
Now,
moving
on
on
things
so
jumping
in
here,
Cory
rough
had
a
article
relating
how
to
probably
add
an
application
customizer
to
an
existing
SPF
X
web
part
project,
and
this
really
comes
down
on
the
fact
that
how
do
you
need
to
modify
the
package
solution
Jason
if
it's
initially
a
bit
part
rather
than
a
application
customizer
or
if
you're
selecting
that
web
part
to
be
a
tan
scope
deployed,
and
then
you
add
an
application
customizer,
and
you
don't
want
that
to
be
a
tenant's
scoped.
A
How
do
we
actually
get
it
available
or
how
do
you
well?
The
second
thing
here:
how
do
you
actually
include
the
client-side
instance
XML
if
it's
a
tenon
scope
deployed,
extension
and
I
want
that
to
get
included
automatically
on
things
so,
and
this
really
comes
down
on
the
fact
that
the
package
solution
Jason
is
the
one
which
actually
controls
how
to
HP
pkg
file
is
getting
packaged
technically,
it's
it's
there
for
defining
the
feature.
Defining
the
the
classic
SharePoint
feature
feature
feature
using
the
SharePoint
feature
framework
as
and
then
element
XML
files
and
how?
A
B
A
B
B
Just
say
the
kind
of
posts
that
I
think
are
great.
Is
it's
stuff
that
technically
should
this
be
in
the
official
documentation?
Probably,
but
there's
no
way
ever
right
to
document
every
scenario.
People
are
gonna
try,
so
it's
super
valuable
from
Cory
and
from
everybody
else
out
there.
That's
doing
posts
like
this
of
just
this
is
even
a
particularly
long
post,
but
it's
a
super
helpful,
hey
I
was
trying
to
do
this.
Here's
how
I
figured
out
how
to
do
it
and
that
really
helps
everybody.
B
You
know
build
up
that
community
again
of
just
you
know
these
helpful
little
tips
that
it's
not
necessarily,
you
know
a
5,000
line
post
or
5,000
word
post,
but
it's
a
super
helpful
post.
So
just
a
big
thank
you
to
Cory
and
everybody
I
know
lots
of
folks
are
putting
out
posts
like
that.
So
thank
you.
A
Yep,
absolutely
absolutely
now
on
the
next
one.
This
is
from
Yannick
around
SPF
expert,
responsive
to
modern
paid
sections.
So
how
do
you
actually
take
the
responsiveness
into
account
using
then
office
UI
fabric
and
reading
those
things?
So,
if
you're
designing
a
web
part
in
one
a
space
that,
depending
on
the
size
of
the
page,
you
want
to
render
stuff
differently?
A
We
were
able
to
actually
modify
the
layout
quite
significantly,
I'm,
going
to
actually
jump
in
the
end
here
and
I'm
gonna
pause
that
one
but
you're
able
to
basically
use
the
same
same
web
part
to
come
up
with
a
completely
different
kind
of
layouts
and
structures,
and
and
all
of
that
so
and
it's
not
technically,
is
it
development.
This
is
actually
gonna
be
interesting
discussion.
A
Is
this
development
or
not
I
would
say
it's
a
solution
design
and
therefore
it
falls
on
the
architecture
and
development
discussions
of
SharePoint
so
coming
up,
you're
using
out-of-the-box
capability,
you're
configuring
that
based
on
your
solution
requirements.
So,
but
it's
really
good
to
know
what
you
can
do
with
out-of-the-box
webparts,
rather
than
always
implement
and
custom
one
right,
any.
B
Chance
you
have
to
use
out
of
the
box,
I
mean
I'm
a
developer
at
heart,
but
but
using
it
out
of
the
box.
Stuff
is
definitely
the
way
to
go
when
it
works
and
when
you
can
use
it,
and
it's
and
now
you
know,
with
fueled,
customizers
and
and
all
the
other
things
there's
a
lot
of
power
in
not
a
lot
of
you
know
what
you
used
to
write,
tens
and
hundreds
of
lines
of
code.
For
now.
There's
there
might
you
know
you
might
be
able
to
avoid
that
which
I've,
definitely
when
possible,
recommend
absolutely.
A
Absolutely
so
it's
really
important
to
understand
what's
possible
from
an
end
user
perspective
as
a
developer.
This
is
doesn't
this
mean
that
you,
you
need
to
know
the
basics
and
you
need
to
know
the
UI
layer.
You
need
to
know
the
business
and
other
stuff,
but
then,
on
top
of
that,
the
dev
stuff
as
well.
So
there's
our
King.
Yes,.
B
C
A
B
A
B
B
What
it
does
so
ID
fix
is
a
little
tool
that
takes.
This
would
be
again
fitting
with
fast-track
and
fitting
with
migration.
You
have
your
on-premises
active
directory
and
you've
got
all
your
people
and
when
you
go
to
Azure
Active
Directory,
some
of
the
properties
and
things
you
can
set
in
certain
ways,
on-premises
don't
translate
over
to
a
sure
ad
for
various
reasons.
I'm
not
a
super
deep
expert
on
that,
but
but
some
of
the
characters
can't
translate
some
of
the
field.
Lengths
can't
translate.
B
A
A
B
The
way
things
work
is
a
team
might
end
up
in
charge
of
something
and
that
team
gets
merged
or
reorg
or
whatever,
and
then
that
happens
two
or
three
times
and
then
there's
this
tool
that
nobody
really
owns
right,
because
it
was
this
team
owned
it
a
year
or
whatever
two
years
ago,
and
that
team
really
doesn't
exist
anymore,
and
so
they
were
actually
getting
requests
for
changes
and
people
are
actually
requesting
the
source
code
to
it
and
say
well
like.
Can
you
just
give
us
the
source
code
we'll
do
it.
B
And
and
they
had
no
ability,
not
ability,
no
Drive
to
do
that,
because
it
wasn't
really
their
tool
to
manage,
and
so
what
we're
doing
is
kind
of
trying
to.
This
is
our
first
one
ID
fix
and
then
we're
gonna.
If
this
goes
well,
which
it's
going
well
right
now,
I
think
it's
gonna
be
fine,
but
when
that
goes
well,
we're
gonna
look
for
other
tools
in
a
similar
vein
right
that,
if
that
are
used,
maybe
are
smaller
and
get
them
out
as
open-source,
because,
obviously
you
have
the
bigger
stuff
like
the
SharePoint
migration
tool.
A
B
That's
an
official
thing,
but
then
you've
got
these
other
smaller
things
that
the
folks
are
using
or
what
happens
in
fast
track.
A
lot
of
the
time
is
somebody
will
write
something
and
maybe
share
it
with
a
couple
people,
but
it's
never
officially
a
thing
right.
We're
trying
to
collect
that
stuff
too
little
power
shine.
B
A
Really
is
the
one
thing:
what's
keep
some
amazing
me
so
I'm
sure
sure
we
don't
scale
for
everything,
but
you
might
think
that
there
would
be
enough
interest
of
building
a
let's
say:
community,
around
open
sourcing
of
PowerShell
and
and
at
some
point
right
we
did
have
actually
even
a
site
which
was
called
PowerShell
dot
office
comm.
You.
A
It
that
was
a
classic
story
around
you.
Just
don't
buy
a
one
team.
It
had
some
objective
for
that
fiscal
and
then
it
went
to
move
there
and
then
people
left
and
then
nobody
was
there
actually
anymore,
maintaining
that
so
it
got
shut
down,
which
is
a
pity
because
there's
so
many
people
building
or
some
PowerShell,
but
there's
no
forum
to
actually
share
them
efficiently.
I
say,
let's
say:
centralized
coordinated
forum
by
Microsoft
with
the
speedy
well.
B
If
you
have,
if
you
have
some
powershell
scripts-
and
we
are
looking
for
stuff-
that's
at
least
tangentially
migration
related
right
now
for
fast-track,
but
you
can
go
to
github.com,
slash,
Microsoft,
slash
fast-track
and
we
have
a
section
there
for
scripts,
and
so,
if
you
have
migration,
ish
related
PowerShell
scripts,
absolutely
welcome
those.
You
can
just
submit
a
pull
request.
We've
got
the
instructions
there
for
contributing,
of
course,
all
your
SharePoint
framework
stuff
that
should
all
still
go
to
the
same
place.
All
Europeans
east
off
goes
to
the
same
place.
B
B
Had
a
new
pn
pjs
released
Friday
last
Friday
the
what
was
1413
in
11th
I
think
so
check
that
out.
That's
one
version:
12.8
is
now
out
got
some
great
fixes
in
there
Alex
Alex
terentyev.
Yes,
thank
you.
He
helped
me
get
through.
We
had
some
batching
issues
with
actually
the
taxonomy
stuff,
so
he
helped
me.
A
Talking
about
SharePoint,
Online
customization
tool
sets
so
he'll,
probably
that
spam
page
is
there
over
there
as
well.
So
if
you're
watching
this
in
the
US
or
closer
to
California,
then
drop
by
and
and
definitely
open,
Saturdays
are
free
for
everybody
to
attend.
So
awesome
awesome
awesome,
awesome
places
to
learn
new
around
the
SharePoint
topic,
but
I
think
that's
it
for
this
one.
We
lost
well
dick.
C
A
It's
not
about
that
and
we
always
and
it's
we
can't
do
the
rig.
We
can't
make
this
happen
in
a
less
than
a
half
an
hour.
It's
just
impossible
have
a
viable
discussion
with
somebody
on
on
the
dev
topics
and
and
different
topics
and
opinions
and
all
that
stuff.
But
that's
fine
and
we'll
have
Wallach
back
okay.
No
next
week,
there's
no
pony
there's.
B
Just
go:
she
lives
up
here
with
me,
she's
my
work
mascot.
We
have
another
rabbit
downstairs
and
the
idea
was
they
were
gonna
live
together,
but
it
turns
out
they
hate
each
other,
so
they
can't
live
together,
which
is
super
sad
for
both,
but
they
literally
when
we
put
them
together.
They
just
like
attack
and
you
think
of
rabbits
is
adorable,
but
when
they
fight
it's
just
it's
like
this
adorable
ball
of
just
teeth
and
anger,
and
it's
really
depressing
so
they
stay
separate.
But
Disko
helps
me
here
in
the
office
yeah.