►
From YouTube: SharePoint Dev Weekly - Episode 49 - 27th of August 2019
Description
SharePoint Dev Weekly is a weekly video chat where Vesa and typically Waldek are talking about the latest news and topics around the SharePoint dev area.
This time they were joined by Jeremy Thake who works as a Principal Program Manager in Microsoft Graph team coordinating the API level SDKs, community efforts and design.
If you want your article or sample mentioned, please use the #SPDevWeekly hashtag on Twitter for letting us know.
This video was recorded on Monday 26th of August 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
Two
clowns
on
their
videos:
I'm
Jerry
I'm
principal
p.m.
on
the
Microsoft
graph
team
I've,
been
at
Microsoft
for
a
total
of
four
and
a
bit
years
now
idea,
boomerang
I
left
and
came
back.
I
went
to
a
startup
called
hyper
fish
and
prior
to
actually
work
in
Microsoft
that
works.
Another
company
called
half-point,
so
I've
been
in
the
SharePoint
space
for.
B
B
Yeah,
it's
the
hard
thing
to
explain,
but
I
think
the
easiest
way
to
explain
it
for
people
that
are
outside
is
is
that
the
Microsoft
graph
API
is
essentially
one
API,
that
you
can
access
all
of
the
products
and
services
inside
of
Microsoft
365,
and
the
challenge
with
that
is
the
way
that
engineering
is
broken
up
is
into
the
individual
products.
So
I
couldn't
walk
into
building
32
and
meet
the
exchange.
Outlook
team-
and
there
are
people
in
that
building
trust
me.
B
They
own
the
mail
and
calendar
and
contacts
API
is
but
then
in
another
building
in
34.
There's
people
that
own
the
SharePoint
API
is
another
building
in
Bellevue
there's
people
are
in
the
team's
api's,
and
so
there
is
a
central
team
which
we
owned
by
reports.
The
inner
a
nurse
has
been
doing
the
graph
for
a
long
time
that
basically
see
the
graph
as
an
overall
thing
and
in
the
individual
api's
Earthship
at
the
graph
overall.
B
So
we
own
all
the
developer
experience
for
the
whole
of
the
graph,
so
the
SDK
is
the
Doc's
the
developer
portal.
The
quick
starts
tutorials.
The
engagement
which
we're
improving
on
in
Stack,
Overflow
and
github,
as
well
as
shipping
samples
and
all
that
presents
at
events
and
blogging
and
podcasts
and
interacting
with
other
communities
in
Microsoft.
Like
you
guys,
I
cast
yeah
and.
A
C
B
B
That's
right,
like
I,
was
umbrella
again,
so
I
used
to
own
messaging
for
office.
Add-Ins
teams
wasn't
even
it
around
then,
which
is
amazing
when
you
think
how
far
that's
come
chef.
What
add-ins
was
the
big
thing
that
I
helped
launch
and
then
I
started
to
reviews
what
was
going
on
when
SPF
X
was
being
talked
about
internally
and
I.
B
But
it's
incredible
to
see
the
adoption
SPF
X
has
had
and
how
much
you
know,
developers
that
were
on
all
these
different
completely
different
stacks
and
dotnet
have
moved
and
adopted
the
JavaScript
world
and
and
brought
worlds
together.
I
was
just
at
SharePoint
fest
here
in
Seattle
last
week,
and
it
was
a
really
good
event
and
you
know
there
was
managed
code
developers
and
then
there
was
mark
correctly.
B
No,
no,
you
must
do
things
by
for
dress-code
and
beyond,
to
make
these
four
environments
and,
like
those
worlds,
have
combined
now
with
SP
effects,
which
was
really
cool
to
see
and
I
dropped
into
a
few
sessions
last
week
and
it
it
was
really
nice
to
see
those
guys
all
in
their
zone
talking
the
same
way
rather
than
before,
talking
in
different
ways.
Yeah.
A
B
Now
that's
for
your
bad
ones,
using
example
bit
and
wall
deck
is
to,
but
if
I
typed
in
Paul
and
there's
you
know,
10,000
people
in
the
name
port
Microsoft,
it's
going
to
put
Paul
that
I've
worked
with
or
collaborating
documents
first
in
there
to
suggestion,
and
and
that's
all
powered
by
the
graph.
And
so
you
know,
the
graph
is
all
over
our
own
first
party
experiences
and
and
therefore
you
as
a
developer,
can
use
the
graph
for
your
own
third
party
experiences
as
we
call
it
absolutely.
A
C
C
Do
everything
by
yourself,
Manish
tokens
and
then
they're
in
there.
There's
grass
like
one
way
consistent
way
to
access
and
you're
like
I,
want
that
it
just
makes
sense
right
and
especially
now,
when
we
have
n
teams
and
planner
and
tasks
and
emails
and
calendar
and-
and
you
can
just
tap
into
all
of
that
with
a
few
calls.
But
with
the
same
player
I
mean
we
all
know
the
hardest
thing.
I
mean
I'm,
not
sure.
If
the
hardest
things
is
dates
and
time
zones.
A
C
Like
the
first
thing,
you
want
to
do
something
against
a
Microsoft
cloud
is
what
off,
because
it's
not
anonymously
available
and
for
people
who
have
no
experience
with
us.
That
is
like
a
huge
block
right
and
then
imagine
you
have
to
do
it
not
only
once
but
two
times
or
three
times,
because
you
want
to
talk
to
exchange
and
something
else,
and
then
something
else
and
they
have.
B
B
B
They're
gonna
have
to
consent,
it
or
an
admins
gonna
have
to
consent
it
for
the
org
is
that
that
gives
the
IT
and
execs
full
visibility
at
any
point.
In
time
of
you
know
what
people
have
access
to
and
that's
the
app
security
for
us
is
just
a
really
important
thing,
and
it
did
mean
that
there
was
a
larger
barrier
to
entry
to
get
in
than
throwing
a
username
and
password
in
which
is
hey
and
we're
consulting
days
back
in
Australia
10:50
years
ago.
B
We
used
to
do
that
right,
like
that
was
what
was
in
the
web
configs
yeah,
whereas
now
it's
client
secrets-
and
you
know,
certificates
that
we
do.
But
the
the
interesting
thing
is
is
there's
work.
Excuse
me,
our
team
has
done
in
the
last
year,
specifically
on
top
of
the
awesome
work,
identity
of
done
with
the
new
emcell
libraries
to
get
that
down
to
one
or
two
lines
of
code
for
the
$0.80
scenarios
and
some
of
the
new
graph
toolkit
stuff
we've
done
with
the
people
pickup
we
just
launched
two
weeks
ago.
B
That's
built
in
so
SP
effects
makes
it
super
easy
to
go,
consume
that,
and
so
the
graph
is
you
know
if
you're,
a
dev
and
yet
you're
still
kind
of
going.
I've
got
my
SharePoint
blinkers
on
and
I'm.
Only
looking
at
the
SharePoint
world,
career-wise
and
I
said
this
a
long
time
ago,
when
I
even
was
in
boxing
I.
Think.
B
Yes,
you
know
I
know
it's
easy
to
think
about.
Well,
we
can
just
call
the
SharePoint
REST
API
is
or
sison
but
I'm,
starting
that
muscle
of
using
the
graph
now
once
your
internal
business
unit,
who's
asking
for
new
features
or
your
a
nice
fee
building
once
they
use
planner
or
teams
or
anything
else,
that's
on
the
graph
you'll
have
that
muscle!
It's
easy.
If
you
go
to
use.
A
B
It's
a
challenge.
Like
I
mean
there
was
always
gaps
with
as
we've
evolved
any
kind
of
platform
or
decides
that
re
plat
a
platform,
and
so
you
know
SharePoint
api's
have
been
run
for
long
time,
yeah
and
Graff
overseas.
Only
three
years
old
and
one
drive
was
our
the
files
API
on
the
graph
was
like
the
big
push,
but
you
know
if
I
had
a
dollar
for
every
time.
Someone
had
asked
me
for
text
on
the
api's.
A
B
Kind,
so
one
of
the
things
we've
been
doing
is
you
know
again:
different
engineering
teams,
there's
the
SharePoint
engineering
team
that
work
with
their
own
SharePoint
user
voice
and
Outlook
have
their
own
ship.
What
use
voice
and
then
graph
as
one
and
we've
tried
to
get
better
at
making
sure
that
you
know
it
there's
easier
visibility
to
see
that
that
is
actually
coming
to
the
graph
and
not
to
carry
on
using
api's
that
have
existed
for
a
long
time.
B
C
Break
so
I
will
put
you
here
a
little
bit
on
a
spot,
because
I
know
there's
a
plenty
of
folks.
We
like
guys.
Why
don't
you
just
expose
everything?
Can
you
talk
a
little
bit
like
how
much
work
goes
into
that?
Imagine
that
we
have
in
SPO
or
permissions
or
webs
how
much
work
would
it
go
to
have
that
exposed
in
graph
yeah.
B
B
But
no,
they
actually
review
the
api's
and
the
shape,
and
so
Darrell
Miller
or
mark
Stafford,
Peter
guess
key
Steve
Anderson
is
a
huge
bunch
of
people
which
they
danker
sure
as
well.
That
you're
seen
all
the
github
issues
and
presenting
a
build
and
so
forth.
They
sit
on
these
councils
and
we
make
sure
that
the
shape
of
the
API
is
the
formatting
and
the
responses
make
sense.
But,
more
importantly,
in
most
cases
that
API
will
return
a
user
object.
We
want
it
to
earn
return.
B
The
same
user
object
than
the
rest
of
the
graph
returns,
not
right.
Weird
user
object
that
in
tuned
things
make
sense,
compare
the
user
object,
the
exchange
team
and
things
make
sense,
and
so
that's
why
we
can't
just
necessarily
just
shoehorn
an
existing
API
into
the
graph,
because
the
standards
it
just
doesn't
meet
and
it
doesn't
reuse
objects.
It
exists,
yeah.
A
Classic
seasoned
API
surface:
it's
quite
messy
to
be
honest
because
it's
it's
it's
an
interest
all,
but
there's
an
interesting
internal
engineering
process.
How
do
we
get
to
the
season?
Maybe
I
in
general?
But
it's
not
consistent.
The
API
design
isn't
consistent
as
I
say
with
crafts,
which
is
a
benefit
for
the
developers
right,
yeah.
B
Because
the
whole
premise
is
it
shouldn't
just
be
shared,
or
there
should
be
that
if
I've
written
against
the
files
API
should
be
really
easy
to
go,
run
against
planner
I
shouldn't
have
to
relearn
what
is
batching
and
Delta
querying,
and
his
change
notifications
and
just
general
querying
and
OData
does
a
lot
of
that
for
us
and
actually
the
same
team.
The
only
Odetta
spec
own,
the
overall
graph
API
spec
2,
and
so
that's
why
we
have
a
lot
of
alignment
there,
but
yeah.
That's
the
main
reason:
it's
just
that.
B
A
B
Is
it?
Is
it
just
crud
we
need,
or
there
are,
the
methods
that
make
sense
to
stop
the
round
tripping,
and
you
know
inefficient
calls
that
hey.
We
could
just
do
this
and
make
this
a
way
more
efficient
call.
So
it
is
frustrating
I
know
that
you
have
to
juggle
between
growth
and
the
existing
API
is,
but
things
take
time.
I
guess
and
we
don't.
A
B
And
you
know
we
have
things
that
have
been
in
beta
for
nearly
two
years:
the
insights
API,
which
essentially
replicate
what
the
delve
UI
does
or
what
ship
with
home
does
or
office.
Comm
does
in
terms
of
like
files,
training
around
me
and
people
I
work
with,
but
that
API
team
have
had
to
evolve
as
those
products
have
evolved
and
our
search
has
evolved
and
we've
never
felt
comfortable
shipping
into
v1.
Because
of
that,
but
ideally
that
wouldn't
be
a
banner
API.
B
That
would
have
been
like
an
alpha,
API
or
something
in
between
and
then
I
guess.
The
next
thing
is
is
like.
We
have
api's
at
the
Fenian
production
there
for
three
years
and
we
would
like
to
rev
them
and
then
provide
new
changes
to
them
and
so
yeah.
We
we
are
looking
at
what
that
means
for
a
v2,
and
we
have
engineering
teams
that
are
putting
pressure
on
us
to
say.
Look
we
want
to
change
this
shape
or
you
want
to.
B
We
want
to
deprecated
this
API
because
we
have
this
new
cool
API,
it's
a
good
replacement,
and
so
that's
all
being
discussed
at
the
moment,
and
there
are
no
time
frames
on
that
and
then
obviously
we'll
go
through
the
same
journey.
The
beta
the
v1
dies
with
API,
so
it
would
just
mean
that
will
jump
to
v2
and
there's
a
good
group
of
MVPs
and
regional
directors.
A
B
A
Really
sure
the
craft
is
a
relatively
new
example,
but
that
if
we
do
an
older
example,
let's
say
s,
p-wave
and
s-wave
web
has
a
method
which
is
being
exposed
using
season
and
first
we
cannot
change
that.
That's
it
it's
it's
it's
long,
yeah
and
it
shifts.
Since
what
2013
we
introduced
season
or
well
2010,
partly
so
since
then,
it's
basically
locked
because
we
can't
break
the
existing
investments,
which
is
a
really
hard
thing
to
then
figure
out,
and
then
you
need
to
think
sure.
A
C
But
I
guess
from
that
point
of
view.
The
another
thing
that
might
be
even
more
worrying
or
more
complex
are
changes
that
you
would
introduce
in
the
database
layer,
so
not
even
in
the
API.
But
imagine
you
need
you
need
to
change
type
of
something
or
you
want
to
add
a
column.
That's
really
required,
but
maybe
not
and
and
then
the
API
surface
is
exactly
the
same.
B
And
we're
finally
getting
the
point-
and
you
know
we're
still
learning
around
terrible.
Oh
excuse
me,
as
a
pair
of
mine,
who's
building,
building
out
all
the
SDKs
I've
had
significant
improvement
last
year,
where
we're
starting
to
build
test
engines
and
mock
frameworks
around
it,
so
that
we
can
validate
that
the
metadata
that
we
publish,
which
defines
the
API
when
we
generate
the
SDKs,
that
the
expected
results
are
those
expecting
results
that
come
back
each
time.
So
you
know
it's
definitely
been
a
journey.
We've
been
on
to
kind
of
mature
this
and
I.
B
B
Like
the
team
that
we
work
with
Jen
do
all
the
developer
experience
work,
including
the
SDKs,
is
like
eight
engineers,
and
so
you
know
there's
a
lot
that
gets
done.
That
generates
all
those
things.
I
Lister
that
we're
responsible
for
and
sometimes
I
get
frustrated
because
it's
like
I
just
get
this
down
and
out,
but
it
just
takes
time
and
because.
A
B
Fizz
and
because
the
graph
touches
so
many
teams,
like
I,
think
there's
80
different
engineering
teams,
I
work
with
now
only
takes
one
of
those
teams
to
go.
I
think
I
may
have
to
put
the
red
button
on
and
then
it
just
stops
everybody
and
it.
You
know
that
yeah,
that's
the
notion
of
the
program
manager
role
is
just
to
juggle
that
which
I
love
I,
love
that
that
aspect
of
you
know
complex
problems
are
there,
which
is
cool
yeah.
A
A
B
B
A
As
long
as
your
emails
with
dear
person,
I
will
reply
on
them
where
we
are
amazingly
still
quite
email,
focused
company
in
in
minute.
Actually
there
is
a
clear,
let's
say,
transition
to
move
towards
teams.
It
seems
to
be
now
happening
with
with
the
Yammer.
It
wasn't
really
there.
It
was
while
for
there
and
then
people
weren't,
using
that
too
much.
But
teams
clearly
has
some
mass
much
more
significant
team,
yeah.
B
I
find
especially
working
over
multiple
regions
like
our.
We
have
a
developer
center
now
in
Nairobi
in
Kenya,
and
then
one
in
Bangalore
in
India,
and
you
know,
Darryl
works
out
of
Montreal
and
Canada.
So
there's
a
lot
of
different
and
then
Dan's
in
London,
and
so
between
that,
like
knowing
the
difference
between
should
I,
send
an
email
or
pseudo
send
an
instant
message
which
you
know
it's
Skype
for
business
like
has
been
rebranded
teams,
but
I
think
the
benefits.
A
A
Now
we're
about
running
out
of
time,
but
so,
let's,
let's
try
to
be
strict
on
that
one.
But
one
thing
what
I
want
to
come
get
back
on
the
on
the
early
discussion
about
your
sense
and
because
it
actually
has
quite
significant
impact
on
SharePoint
is,
is
the
fact
that
we
start
demanding
app,
IDs
and
off
in
the
intercourse
and
August
as
part
of
SharePoint
framework.
Starting
on
one
point,
four
points:
no.
C
A
Point
six
graph,
API
one
point:
six,
yes,
I
should
know
this,
but
anyway
you
can
easily
access
to
craft
ApS
everything
else,
but
but
that's
actually
one
of
the
the
things
why
and
and
coming
back
on
your
customers
and
enterprise
customers
saying
that
they
need
to
know
what's
actually
hitting
their
API
nice
and
that's
precisely
why
we
need
to
teach
our
developers
to
move
away
from
script
editor
with
words
and
quantitative
way,
parts
and
all
of
those
hacks,
because
that's
not
a
reliable
way
of
doing
anything.
All
right,
yeah.
B
It
definitely
gives
you
more
visibility.
This
way,
that's
for
sure
and
and
I
mean
my
correctly
and
I
were
having
discussion
last
week.
He
had
the
customer
talking
about
this
notion
of.
If
you
want
an
SPF
X,
where
part
to
call
the
graph,
you
know
it
still
needs
to
go
through
the
same
consent
process.
So
you
know,
if
you
want
to
access
the
calendar,
the
in
the
admin
center
of
SharePoint,
you
have
to
bless
the
application
ID
to
say.
B
Okay,
now
the
users
can
access
calendar
with
this
app
ID,
which
is
what
the
graph
client
inside
SPF
X
uses
and
so
you're
in
control
of
of
that,
and
if
you
want
to
get
more
granular
and
you
can
use
isolating
webparts
to
to
you
know,
obviously
going
to
lose
a
little
bit
of
experience
by
doing
it.
But
you
can
isolate
what
gets
access
to
what
in
your
sharepoint
pages,
but
it
gives
you
in
control,
whereas
you
know
if
you're
using
API
has
been
around
a
bit
longer
than
that
you're
not
going
to
have
that
game.
B
A
B
A
B
The
team
the
way
the
graph
works,
which
is
similar
to
your
org,
well
actually
notice
dissimilar
because
you
have
a
chef
on
conference
as
well,
but
we
run
on
build
and
we
run
on
ignite
timeframe.
So
every
six
months,
and
so
it
ignites
the
next
one
for
us,
build,
we
had
great
kind
of
set
of
things
were
announcing.
B
B
We've
had
SharePoint
on-prem,
we're
fast,
where
you
can
ingest
content
from
non
SharePoint
and
onedrive
areas,
and
you
know
we're
going
to
give
developers
the
ability
to
connect
to
other
systems
and
have
that
part
of
your
Microsoft
search
experience,
which
shows
up
not
just
in
SharePoint
search
but
in
Outlook
assertion,
team
search
and
wherever
you
see
a
search
bar,
Internet,
Microsoft,
and
so
for
me,
I.
Think,
beyond
a
reveal
more
of
that
story,
it
ignites
is
super
exciting.
That
team
is
on
fire
right
now
to
say
understatement.
B
B
B
Yeah,
so
you
know
everything's
graph
like
when
there's
a
batch
or
workloads
and
that's
the
bit
that
is
taxing
for
us-
is
getting
these
guys
on
from
the
other
teams
and
having
them
on
board
and
be
part
of
the
stories.
It's
it's
tax
on
them
that
they're
like
we
could
just
do
this
ourselves
and
ship
our
own
API,
and
so
then
it's.
B
B
You
know
having
someone
that's
been
in
that
environment
for
so
long
and
yeah
and
we
work
the
leaks.
They're,
not
people
too,
but
just
having
Geoffrey
involved
is
cool
too.
So
those
two
things
are
the
things
I'm
most
excited
for.
The
graph
to
you
know
reveal
more
of
we've
talked
about
both
in
the
past,
but
to
reveal
more
of
an
ignite.
B
B
A
C
C
B
C
C
B
B
C
A
C
B
A
B
B
B
B
A
Thank
you.
Okay.
This
week
we
have
a
ship
on
Saturday,
Central,
Europe,
I,
think
this
is
in
Zurich.
If
I
remember
correctly,
and
there's
been
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
actually
promotion
on
this
one,
at
least
in
Europe
side
of
the
house,
which
is
always
good.
It
is
in
Zurich
and
I.
Think
it's
gonna
be
a
really
cool
setup.
I
was
there
actually,
when
I
was
it's
a
year
ago,
or
something
like
that,
and
it's
a
really
really
nice
location,
I
was
actually
deserving.
C
A
C
A
Which
is
always
super
fun
for
people
who
are
traveling
over
but
and
there's
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
really
really
well-known
people
and
speakers
in
this
one.
So
it's
gonna
be
probably
quite
awesome.
Obsession
really
sad
that
I
couldn't
actually
make
it,
but
hey.
It
is
what
it
is.
You
can't
be
in
all
of
the
locations
really
cool
set
up.
Now,
let's
go
to
the
articles,
then.
A
A
A
A
So
this
is
the
the
team
standard
sharing
capability
and
basically
starting
that,
no
that's
really
cool.
Actually,
that's
I'd
I
wasn't
wearing
that.
So
and
then
the
story
is
here
is
that
how
do
you
act
that
one
floating
on
on
the
modern
pages?
One
thing
maybe
do
notice
here
is
that
he's
using
this
kind
of
an
absolute
floating
mechanism
and
to
get
the
teams
in
the
right
location
I
did
yes
their
radius.
So.
A
C
I
mean
you
could
do
it
in
in
in
a
way
that
you
would
attach
it
to
the
placeholder
Dom
element,
and
then
you
CSS
to
move
it
around
I.
Wasn't
there
after
rolling
with
that,
is
that
if
you
had
two
different
things
from
two
vendors,
they
could
overlay
each
other
like
there
is
no.
As
you
say,
there
is
no
structured
way
of
doing
that,
so
they
could
overlay,
they
could
look
bad.
They
could
like
one
could
hide
another,
so
there
is
really
no
robust
way
of
doing
it.
If
you
like
now,.
A
To
be
fair,
maybe
that's
it's
something
we're
sure
to
have
a
look
on
in
our
team
to
have
a
robust
way
of
doing
that.
So,
if
there's
a
multiple
likes
and
it
looks
really
cool,
it
works,
that's
not
the
problem,
but
if
you
install
two
different
or
services
from
two
different
providers,
maybe
they
start
collection
and
then
we
have
a
problem.
C
A
A
A
Let
me
take
your
notes,
we'll
ship
it
by
next
week.
Let's
move
it
in
here
be
a
schizophrenic
at
debugging,
SPF
x2,
so
it
can
array
provision.
So
basically,
this
is
really
around
how
you
use
the
profiles
and
how
they
make
the
profiles
to
work
within
your
visitors
to
their
code
as
well.
So
Yannick
has
really
make
a
detailed
investigation,
how
the
edge
actually
work
and
how
the
profiles
work
and
then
what
would
be
the
set
up
of
having
been
multiple
different
profiles
by
default
available
in
the
visual
studio
code?
A
C
A
Go
crow,
yeah,
yeah
anyway
office,
365
groups,
search
with
Park
office
traces
to
a
day
should
be
a
space
over
there,
but
that's
fine
too,
so,
basically
using
much
of
craft
that
then
provide
a
group
search
experience,
a
custom
experience
so
you're
able
to
then
certs
those
troops
which
you
might
be
are
part
of.
So
you
have
a
part
of
multiple
groups.
A
So
this
is
something
that's
actually
truly
Turner
dete
have
a
blog
post
in
the
past
as
well,
but
Cory,
it's
all
about
repeating
it's
all
about
finding
the
right
links
and
writing
our
information.
But
it's
basically
have
it
using
the
data
interception
Eagles
off
in
the
link,
and
that
means
that
the
it's
then
opening
the
actual
target
in
the
new
window.
A
So-
and
this
really
comes
down
on
the
partial
loading
of
the
page-
that's
why
there's
a
special
handling
of
the
of
the
linking
in
the
in
the
Mauritian
super
important
thing
by
the
way
to
document.
Definitely,
this
is,
from
you
actual,
obviously,
a
fabric
based
fabric
days,
365
encoded
images
for
SPF
X
projects.
So
this
is
a
tool
which
you
can
use
to
get
the
data
URL
or
the
base64
encoded
version
of
the
images.
So
you
don't
actually
need
to
have
the
image
inside
of
the
of
the
web
part
implementation.
C
A
Browser's
basically,
then
read
that
string
and
then
basically
render
the
image
based
on
the
value.
That's
how
that's
what
actually
happens
there
there's
a
really
cool
stuff
as
well.
Now
this
one
was
from
Elio
how
to
get
hub
site
ID
for
SharePoint
framework,
good
reminder,
I.
Think
Nicolas
Poussin
had
something
similar
as
a
blog
post
in
a
past
as
well,
but
basically
what
what
is
the
easiest
way
to
understand
which
hub
I'm
actually
associated
into
and
what
should
I
actually
need
to
execute.
A
C
A
A
C
Then,
in
in
a
way
that
brings
us
to
an
interesting
thing
right,
because,
though
the
web
parts
name
is
fixed
right,
it
still
says
highlighted
recent
whatever,
but
then
in
kql.
You
can
do
any
search
query
you
want,
so
it's
going
to
show
anything
and
anything
right.
So
we
should.
You
should
be
able
now
to
set
it
in
the
hunt.
A
Absolutely
and
but
and
and
but
this
is
already
one
step
forward
on
the
wire
making
it
more
flexible
and
the
second
kind
of
a
logical
piece
which
everybody
is
asking,
there's
quite
a
lot
of
flows
from
that
twenty
years.
Of
course,
is
that
I
want
to
define
the
custom
template?
Yes,
of
course,
because
that's
still
missing
so
but
again,
if
nothing
else,
if
you
don't,
if
you
are,
can
use
open
source
tooling,
we
do
have
the
search
web
part
available
as
an
open
source
tooling,
which
gives
you
the
flexibility
of
templating
and
everything
else.
A
It's
a
beautiful
implementation,
but
then,
if
we
aren't
I
use
first
party
experiences,
this
is
enough.
Hey
that's
now
available
in
the
highlighted,
convert
paper
and
definitely
more
to
come
over
there
as
well,
and
then
the
last
piece
is
from
Marc
Lee
Anderson,
using
in
work
sites
Matt
just
back
in
the
root
side
in
office
365,
it's
just
a
dev
topic.
It's
a
design.
A
C
A
C
A
A
Yes
correct,
but
right
now
it
is
only
working
on
the
root
side
of
the
tenon,
so
you
can't
actually
do
that
so
there's
a
say:
a
hard-coded
limit
area,
limit,
hard-coded
limitation
by
design
limitation.
That
I
don't
know,
works
on
the
on
the
root
side.
Of
that,
that's
probably
the
right
way
of
doing
it.
I'm
saying
that,
but
it's
it
might
actually
have
extended
on
other
side
as
well,
and
then
we
also
have,
if
you
have
an
existing.
C
C
A
That
is
true
and
then
there's
few
constraints
which
mark
is
also
defining
here.
I
connected,
it
cannot
be
connected
to
a
crew,
could
be
a
hub
side
or
the
associative
hub
sites.
The
what
this
one
in
here
which
you're
moving
but
then,
when
you
moved
in,
then
you
can
able
to
associate
that
to
be
a
hub
site
later.
So.
C
C
A
That's
is
ongoing
ongoing
and
plan
to
get
actually
released
worldwide
relatively
soon
as
well
cute,
and
there
say
example
video
event
from
from
judgments
in
skin
around
this
one,
so
but
really
useful
capability
and
available,
and
you
need
to
have
to
have
a
latest
version
of
shipment
on
an
impartial
which,
by
the
way,
if
you
are
using
SharePoint
Online
power,
show
please
use
the
power,
show
gallery
version
of
things.
We
are
still
releasing
MSI's
for
this
one,
but
sooner
or
later
we're
not
gonna.
Do
that
anymore,
because
MSI
based
delivery
of
PowerShell
modules.
A
Cool
I
think
that's
it
for
the
slides
or
the
story
for
slides
the
website
web
slide.
It
says,
let
me
actually
start
recording
presenting
and
coming
here,
so
just
to
clarify
it's
interesting
to
see
how
the
video
will
be
stitched
together.
This
is
by
design
and
so
we're
recording
this
before
we
are
recording
to
intro,
which
are
may
take
later
today
and
then.
C
C
We
let
the
feast
to
sit
for
as
a
official
beta
for
two
months
where
it
were.
Typically,
we
release
a
version
every
month,
so
we've
done
it
for
two
months
and
now
it's
the
time
for
v2
and-
and
we
haven't
heard
anything
that
would
prevent
us
from
doing
a
release
yet
no
knock
on
the
wood.
So,
if
all
is
well,
we
will
have
a
this
weekend.
A
What
do
I
have
my
urgent
table?
There's
some
overall
fees,
clear
planning
objectives
and
budgeting
and
all
of
that
stuff.
What's
it's
not
super
fun,
but
we
need
to
figure
out
how
do
we?
What
are
we,
what
are
we
actually
delivering
and
from
a
as
a
team
perspective
as
an
SP,
FX
team
perspective,
and
also
from
open
source
perspective
of
the
house
and
then
to
leadership,
articles
and
stuff?
Sorry:
documents
which
I
need
to
write
to
change
some
of
the
internal
processes,
but
nothing,
let's
say
traumatic
or
for
this
week
at
least.
A
Well,
that's
already
pretty
much
closed,
so
we
know
X
so
so
that
should
be
fine
and
some
of
our
some
of
our
team
members
are
finalizing
the
1.10
right
now
and
some
are
already
thinking
ahead
and
building
the
future
of
the
model
as
well.
So
it
should
be
interesting,
stuff
announced
in
ignite
related
on
that
one
cool,
but
I
can't
disclose
anything
at
this
point.
A
I
booked
my
my
yesterday,
my
hotel
for
ignite
and
I'm
still
again
on
the
same
location,
which
I'm
always
which
is
good,
and
then
flights
are
organized
as
well.
It's
actually
one
of
the
things
on
the
flights
was
that's
a
lot
of
the
flights
which
I
was
trying
to
book
last
week
were
basically
true
UK.
So
if
you're
headed
right,
you
probably
want
to
think
about
that
option,
because.
C
And
you
don't
want
to
be
a
guinea
pig
for
a
new
processor
that
might
or
not
mine
worked
like.
It
reminds
me
a
lot
of
the
the
y2k
bug
like
everybody's
like
will
it
work
and
then
it
did.
But
then
you
never
know
like
you
don't
want
to
be
on
the
first
batch
of
people
going
there
yeah,
it
might
be
like
there
might
be
some
side
effects
to
it.
Who
yeah,
who
knows
absolutely.
A
A
I'm
flying
through
Iceland,
so
I
plan
to
say
it's
good,
fast,
so
transfer
as
well
and
super
super
reliable.
So
that's
really
good
anyway,
hoping
to
see
everybody
in
ignite
as
well.
You
can
actually
make
it
and
congratulations
for
the
ignite
speakers
that
results
came
out
actually
last
yeah.
Absolutely
that's
always
a
really
hard
thing
as
well,
because
there's
always
people
who
get
disappointed
or
not
getting
and
to
speak
in
position
and
then
and
then
it's
balancing
act
of
getting
new
fresh
blood
but
then
required.