►
From YouTube: SharePoint Dev Weekly - Episode 30 - 12th of March 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. Vardhaman Deshpande from Content and Code as a visitor this week.
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 11th of March 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
Action
so
welcome
everybody.
This
is
SharePoint
dev
weekly.
This
is
episode
30,
which
is
quite
nice,
so
it
is
11th
of
March,
and
this
week
we
have
once
again
an
MVP
visitor
in
the
call
so
Waterman.
It
is
your
actually
your
you
are
new
MVP,
it
relatively
big
and
you
are
joining
at
MVP
summit
next
week.
So
tell
us
slightly
about
yourself.
Yeah.
A
Sure
so
yeah,
as
I
said,
this
is
my
first
year
as
a
MVP.
So
a
lots
of
new
things
happening
first
MVP
summit
coming
up
as
well.
So
look
forward
to
that
and
just
to
give
you
a
background
of
myself,
I've
been
working
with
SharePoint
for
almost
eight
years.
I
was
trying
to
remember
how
long
it's
been
so
yeah
it's
about
eight
years
or
so
and
I
remember.
My
very
first
sharepoint
project
was
to
do
with
Silverlight
client
object
model.
B
A
B
You've
been
doing
really
kind
of
a
both
back-end
and
front-end
stuff
in
your
past,
because
I
remember
that
you've
been
really
active
on
the
PMP
activities,
way
back
already
related
on
backend
systems
and
all
of
that
and
provisioning
stuff
and
then
nowadays,
more
on
the
SharePoint
framework.
Well
not
only
open
framework,
but
if
you
think
about
obviously,
if
you
think
about
the
whole
SharePoint
the
ecosystem
and
development
community,
it's
it's
much
more
than
SharePoint.
Obviously
it's
the
graph,
it's
the
craft,
it's
the
team,
it's
the
all
of
the
services
in
office
365!
B
A
Recently,
it's
become
typescript,
react
and
all
of
that
feisty
effects,
and
then,
if
there's
some
back-end
code,
try
to
do
it
in
is
your
function,
so
has
web
app
or
something
so
like
one
shape?
One
solution
can
have
stuff
in
there
right
from
front-end
type
script
to
like
as
your
functions
and
any
other
flow.
B
Yeah
now
that
the
the
Microsoft
team's
tab
development
comes
with
SharePoint
framework,
really
the
I've
been
really
starting
to
kind
of
a
define
our
future
in
a
way
that
hey
we're,
building,
Microsoft
teams
tabs
using
the
Mike's
of
craft
conceptual
api's,
contextual,
api's,
but
then
implementing
them
using
SharePoint
framework.
Yes,
which
actually
really
shows
the
the
integrations
of
all
of
this.
Not
because
a
Microsoft
graph
is
the
API
later.
Then
we
have
the
host,
which
could
be
then
SharePoint
you
ice
or
Microsoft
teams
or
potentially
office
clients
in
the
future.
B
C
Yeah
yeah,
it's
it's
it's
something
that
I've
been
doing
since
I
died.
So
like
back
back
back
back
in
the
years
I've
been
all
I've
been
doing,
is
web,
so
I
would
start
with
HTML
3.2.
In
summarize,
no,
not
not
93
94,
maybe
even
earlier
then
I
would
learn.
Php
I
would
do
that
for
a
long
long
time.
They
would
learn
some
other
things.
C
B
C
B
C
Been
traveling
I
actually
gave
a
SharePoint
development
training
to
a
customer
of
ours
who
are
a
company
who
are
based
on
in
Germany,
and
they
just
migrated
or
are
about
two
month,
I
write
to
SharePoint
2019
on
pram,
and
we
talked
about
like
to.
There
were
two
main
areas.
Actually
three
two
of
them
were
done
by
me.
One
was
done
by
urban
D
areas
and
I
wish
I
talked
to
them
was
one
how
we
used
to
do
things
in
the
past
versus
how
are
we
doing
things
now
right?
C
And
then
another
one
way
was
SPF
X,
so
SPF
X
on-premises.
Now
we
had
a
really
long
disguise
so
originally
we
would
plan
that
we
would.
We
had
a
number
of
topics
and
we
said
we
want
to
spend
about
an
hour
per
topic
and
the
first
one
was
difference
like
coming
from
the
past
going
to
the
modern
development.
Now
we
talked
about
in
three
hours
and
we
weren't
done
so
that
just
proves
like
how
big
of
a
switch.
C
It
is
actually
too
many
who
are
still
on
premises,
who
don't
live
and
breathe
cloud
to
try
to
leave
behind
or
even
put
into
perspective
everything
that
we
can
do
still
on-premises,
but
that
isn't
necessarily
the
best
way
to
go.
Given
things
like
your
platform,
hygiene
performance
stability,
upgrade
ability
being
ready
to
migrate
to
the
cloud
and
so
forth,
and
so
on
right.
So
there
are
a
number
consequences
of
doing
things.
C
The
way
we
used
to
do
things
in
the
past,
like
me
being
like
me
doing,
Internet,
sighs,
yep
right,
so
there
was
one
and
then
another
one
was
SP
effects
on
premises
and
preparing
for
the
course
I
was
like
crappy
I
know
these
things,
and
then
we
would
talk
about
things
like
logging.
How
do
you
lock
the
things
on
premises
like
there?
There
is
no
app
insights.
A
C
How
do
you
and
then
you
try
to
dissect
okay?
So
what
does
it
mean
to
have
a
custom
thing
like
app
insights
on
premise
as
well?
It
needs
to
scale
it's
a
lot
of
write
operations.
He
needs
to
be
able
to
batch
request
because
it's
all
Lyons
has
IDE
calls.
You
need
to
be
able
to
authenticate
to
that.
There
are
like
many
many
many
many
things.
There's
like
wow,
that's
complicated
right.
C
These
are
just
building
those
that
we
can
just
pick
and
use
words
on
premise
like
there's.
None
of
that
like
her
and
her
interesting,
a
requirement
they
had.
Okay
is
what
if
we
would
have
and
I
guess,
the
easiest
way
to
explain
it
is
the
tenant
properties
equivalent
on
pram
yeah,
you,
you
would
need
to
have
a
list
somewhere
and
you
could
start
a
day
over
there.
C
B
A
A
B
Certain
scenarios,
but
then
it's
kind
of
bypassing
the
code
for
having
a
one
tenant
in
as
a
farm,
and
it's
kids,
it's
complicated,
but
it's
it's
one
of
the
things
I
heard
earlier
today,
a
chat
with
Irvin
and
he
was
saying
one
of
the
things.
What
was
interesting
around
the
training
was
the
fact
that
there's
so
many
things
which
the
cloud
is
ahead
of
the
game.
B
It's
a
girl,
you
can
do
it,
but
not
in
on
prep
or
you
can
be
a
but
not
in
on
press,
even
in
SharePoint
2019,
because
we
need
to
remember
that
it's
cloud
first,
we've
been
really
using
roughly
20
new
versions
already
to
the
cloud
after
Chevonne
2019
was
released
on
premise
or
something
like
that.
But.
C
C
B
But
it
is
interesting.
We
talked
about
this
few
times,
I
think
in
this
course
as
well,
so
back
in
when
we
released
the
one
version
in
three
years
that
was
kind
of
a
safe.
It
was
more
safer
for
a
developer
as
an
IT
person
as
well,
because
you
you
knew
what
you
need
to
learn
that
there
was
a
certain
amount
of
things.
B
What
you
needed
to
learn
to
be
able
to
successful
right
now,
the
things
are
just
evolving
so
fast
and
we're
releasing
a
new
version
of
SharePoint
framework
again
relatively
soon
another
one
in
SPC
or
pretty
close,
there's
busiest
implants,
something
like
that
did
I
say
that
out
loud.
But
don't
quote
me
on
that
entry
I.
B
C
B
More
than
that,
yes,
absolutely
absolutely
it's
an
interesting
challenge:
how
to
keep
up
on
things
and
plus
the
fact
that
we
need
to
still
as
a
Microsoft.
We
need
to
improve
the
versioning
model.
We
need
to
improve
the
changed
documentation.
We
need
to
improve
what's
available,
where
I
was
just
having
a
discussion
on
email
earlier
today,
related
on,
for
example,
column
formatting,
which
is
supported
action
upon
2019
and
but
then
on
documentation.
We
do
not
call
out
which
capabilities
are
in
2019.
Oh
it's
ironclad.
B
A
So
rank
quite
recently,
I've
been
working
on
a
project
mostly
for
SPF
X.
Using
one
point,
seven
four
point:
one
I
think
it's
about
I,
think
about
35
or
so
components
and
extensions
in
there
so
I'm,
starting
to
notice
a
few
issues
which
I've
locked
on
the
SPF
Doc's
list
about
long
build
times
and
so
on.
A
But
yeah
it's
been
quite
good
and
also
one
thing
which
I'm
looking
forward
to
hopefully
soon
is
the
library
package
to
support
in
which
would
be
useful
in
like
large
back
for
our
projects
like
this
yeah
yeah
and
on
the
community
side,
I
mean
helping
with
helping
waldek
with
some
of
the
office
cry.
Cli
yeah.
C
A
C
A
B
Good
hosted
where
you
like,
you
could
host
it
in
app
catalog
Haven
and
then
use
the
CD
any
URL.
The
reference
that's
one
way
of
doing
that,
but
yeah,
but
but
the
library,
packets,
it's
coming
in
1.8
or
right
after
when
we
could
stuff
document
that
so,
okay,
okay,
so-
and
it's
understandable,
ask
absolutely
now-
we
have
quite
a
few
actually
articles
and
discussions
which
we
wanted
to
go
through.
So
let's,
let's
actually
jump
on
the
on
the
articles.
So
let's
see
how
much
time
we'll
take
today
again.
Well,
they
call
ours.
B
Okay,
so
you're
using
lunch
time
for
this
one.
So
let
me
actually
get
you
there
so
anyway.
So
let's
actually
coach
with
this
thing.
So
one
of
the
things
what
we
released
last
week,
super
cool
webcast
I
did
fail.
There's
a
small,
it's
a
big,
be
a
small
hiccup
on
on
the
video
editing
of
this
one,
there's
a
duplicate
section
of
a
1-1
section,
but
not
a
massive
deal,
but
a
webcast
related
on
modern
shares
report,
which
is
available
as
an
open
source
solution
from
Frank,
Frank,
corny
and
Harold
goes
back.
B
So
Terada
actually
implemented
this
kind
of
an
extensibility
model
on
top
of
the
web
part
which
is
based
on
application
customizer.
So
it's
a
really
cool
set
up
on
how
to
have
kind
of
similar
experience
as
classic
SharePoint
extensibility
the
search
extensibility
UI.
So
how
you
have
a
text
box
and
you
have
a
result
and
you're
able
to
define
the
templates,
you're
able
to
associate
actions
and
then
tear
out.
B
Basically,
then,
is
extending
that,
with
the
capability
of
having
customer
specific
functions
so
or
executables
associated
to
the
web
part,
it's
a
really
really
cool
set
up
and
let's
see
if
I
can
actually
so,
let's
see
if
I
can
actually
make
this
happen
in
a
second
I'll,
just
wanna
jumped
as
an
excel
to
an
example.
Here,
that's
not
a
good
example,
but
here's
a
way
to
actually
add,
let's
see
where
we
would
actually
have
that
Multi
result:
whip
Forge!
Well,
this
one
is
a
good
one.
B
So,
okay,
let
me
post
in
here
and
we
don't
actually
wanna,
see
other
videos
and
it's
basically
having
multiple
set
of
web
parts.
There's
a
one
wet
bar
over
there,
which
is
text
box
web
part,
and
then
you
have
the
result.
Web
part
like
in
the
in
the
classic
SharePoint
and
then
you're
able
to
modify
the
results
web
part,
and
so
they've
done
really
really
cool
set
up
for
anybody
to
take
advantage,
and
obviously
everything
is
open
sourced.
B
B
To
be
decided,
yes,
yes,
so
I
know
for
a
fact
that
there
are
people
getting
recruited
on
leading
Network,
which
will
be
public
at
some
point,
so
I
think
we'll
be
successful
and
done
so
people
who
are
aware
how
SharePoint
framework
works,
and
then
they
will
work
with
us
and
from
the
chiffon
framework
team
to
figure
out.
How
do
we
actually
make
this
happen,
but
this
one
already
is,
somebody
is
looking
for
having
an
extends,
extensible
or
configurable
search
results.
If
the
order
to
book
search
results,
what
is
it
it's
it's?
B
What
we
wanted
to
actually
discuss
quite
more
detailed,
was
this
really
good
stuff
from
is
a
cruising
filter
as
Zack
is
a
crew
program
manager
from
1-5
on
SharePoint,
the
engineering
and
his
team
is
responsible
of
the
box
set
operational,
optimizations
and
API
calls,
and
all
of
that
behind
the
scenes.
So
he's
responsible
technically
on
the
totaling
happening
behind
the
scenes,
and
all
of
that,
so
he.
B
He
had
a
session
in
McKnight
related
on
the
on
the
throttling,
and
why
do
we
do
that
and
what
does
it
actually
mean
and
how
vojta
and
his
team
is
working
on
optimizing,
the
API
layer
as
we
speak,
but
what
this
is
all
about.
This
keeps
that
this
actually
explains
the
challenge:
what
we're
also
having
internally
inside
of
the
SharePoint
chiponis
a
legacy
solution?
Well,
that's
a
wrong
way
of
putting
that
SharePoint
has
a
route
for
a
few
years
around
for
a
few
years.
B
Yes,
I
think
I
saw
internal
methods,
was
it
on
autumn,
where
Jeff
deeper?
No,
that
shared
something
from
2001
when
they
did
a
mock-up
of
SharePoint
for
Microsoft
leadership,
which
was
critical.
So
it's
been
around
for
a
long
time
and
a
product
which
has
been
around
for
a
long
time.
It
has
legacy
related
on
API
layers
and
a
lot
of
that
stuff,
because
we
can't
always
rewrite
everything
as
we
release
a
new
version,
that's
just
impossible,
and
that
really
shows,
and
then
the
challenge
related
on
optimizing.
B
Some
of
the
the
SharePoint
rest
course
as
an
example.
So
if
you're
calling
API
web
WIPs,
the
query
count
is
actually
18.
If
you
call
webs
and
you
could
request
a
specific
thing,
the
query
count
goes
down
the
tree
and
that's
a
really
significant
change.
It's
almost
50%
reduced
from
a
duration
perspective
as
well.
B
That's
that's
the
timer,
whereas
I
spend
on
the
before
we
respond.
The
query
count
is
what's
happening
behind
of
the
scenes,
so
the
the
sequel
server
query
is
behind
of
the
scenes
in
the
server
side,
so
how
many
operations
behind
of
that
REST
API
call
actually
happens
behind
of
the
scenes,
but
that's
a
fair
point.
We
probably
should
be
more
open
around
these
things
and
I.
Think
well,
like
you
had
a
good
comment
on
this
one
which
was
should
I
quote
to
you.
You
have
no
idea
what
it
was.
No.
C
Right
so
so
so
as
as
you
said
right,
it's
not
easy
for
us
to
optimize
the
calls
that
we
do
right
because
duration,
that
one
comes
back
in
into
response
I'm,
not
sure
if
that's
duration
of
the
sequel,
query
or
duration
of
the
API
call
yeah
I
can't.
But
there
is
value
in
that
in
response.
But
the
query
count
that
is
not
exposed
at
all.
So
there's
no
way
for
us
to
even
know
the
impact
on
servers
from
the
content
that
we
issue.
Yep
yeah.
C
I
can
imagine
it
would
be
impossible
for
you
to
have
talks
like
this,
like
for
each
kind
of
API
call
to
have
that
in
dogs,
but
at
least,
if
that,
if
that
came
back
from
the
API
at
least,
then
we
would
know,
like
sure,
query
count
should
be
below
I
know.
Five
or
four
everything
up
is
probably
a
reason
to
optimize
yeah.
B
B
Raise
awareness
awareness
absolutely
but
then
the
official
documentation
has
to
be
updated,
and
that
means
then
that
we
would
need
to
go
through
the
basic
scenarios
in
generally
and
double-check.
The
query
counts
and
then
release
those
openly
and
I.
Think
that's
something
absolutely
absolutely,
but
we
should
be
doing
sooner
or
later
now.
Can
we
allocate
resources
on
doing
that
in
a
short
timeframe?
Let's
see,
but
that's
the
only
way
we
could
actually
make
this
more
visible.
Now,
obviously
the
somebody
might
say
well
why
don't
you
fix
that?
B
Why
is
the
query
code
18
and
there
are
various
numerius
reasons
why
it's
18
and
again
the
SharePoint
has
such
a
huge
legacy.
It
has
a
lot
of
history,
and
that
means
that
it's
we
cannot
optimize
that
in
the
same
way
as
an
example
for
craft
API
and
even
craft
API
has
certain
recommendations
related
on.
How
do
you
should
be
calling
the
graph
API,
but
craft
API
is
a
new
of
the
API
layer
which
is
optimized
to
be
used
from,
for
example,
webparts
and
external
usage
and
the
sharepoint
classic
rest
api?
B
B
B
Proxy,
which
is
using
to
get
rid
of
the
data
in
SharePoint,
which
is
then
more
optimized
for
that
kind
of
usage,
so
that
the
v1
so-called
v1
api's
are
just
well
they're
evolving
there.
It's
it's
it's
more
evolutional,
unfortunately,
and
we
need
to
figure
out
how
do
we
well,
we?
How
do
we
optimize
things
and
out?
We
document
things,
but
it's
a
really
interesting
discussion
and
the
difference
is
pretty
huge.
Six
times
more
query
counts
and
almost
50%
increase
on
time
and.
C
I
guess
that
that
that
either
way
I
mean
sure
I
am
aware
of
the
fact
that,
like
we
cannot
fix
everything
and
I
mean
I'm,
saying
we,
because
I
am
a
part
of
PMP
and
PMP
has
the
power
and
ability
has
the
force
to
do
some
things,
but
even
a
site.
There
are
only
that
many
hours
in
a
day
right
sure,
so
in
the
end,
I
think
that
the
first
step
at
least,
if
I,
would
see
it.
From
my
point
of
view.
B
C
Not
that
is
so
for
me,
there
will
be
like
the
primary,
the
first
step
that
we
should
get
addressed,
and
we
that
regards
product
group
engineers
is
to
expose
the
query,
count,
yep
and
basically,
let
us
know
and
assuming
that
there
is
no
sensitive
things
like
well.
If
you
knew
the
query
count,
then
you
would
specifically
look
for
the
highest
one
to
DDoS
our
no
because
that's.
C
C
B
We
need
to
take
care
of
those
dido
scenarios
as
well,
so
because
somebody
might
be
trying
to
do
a
denial
of
service
attacks
and
basically
we
just
need
to
plug
them
and
that's
why
we've
been
seeing
them
problems
related
on
chortling,
because
every
now
and
then
as
some
software
might
actually
look
like
that,
it's
trying
to
do
starts
down
and
then
we
need
to
clock
it.
So
it's
not
the
impacting
other
tenants
and
then
we
might
have.
C
B
B
I,
don't
think
that
has
a
specific
session
in
in
the
MVP
summit,
but
we
and
if
you
die,
if
he
will
drop
by
hero
drop
by
in
the
API
session
and
for
Shepherd,
which
is
run
by
Jeremy,
Kelly
and
Kathy
do
but
for
any
bits.
So,
yes,
this
is
not
an
MVP
call.
This
is
or
video
recording,
so
you
summit
next
week,
so
the
second
thing
kind
of
pinpointing
this
one
so
in
the
same
way
as
with
their
with
ship
one
and
the
same
actually
a
price
for
Microsoft
graph.
B
Moving
on
things
something
related
on
SharePoint
framework,
this
one
was
interesting
from
truckin
shotgun
related
on
at
the
fact
that
he
works
for
k2
he's
an
MEP
as
well,
but
obviously,
and
he's
been
testing
around
the
scenario
on
how
do
I
call
securely.
K2
workflow
API
is
from
SharePoint
open
framework
and
it's
relatively
straightforward,
fully
supported
scenarios
or
their
say,
a
show
ad
application.
It
has
a
specific
them
permissions
in
the
in
the
call.
That's
actually
the
wrist
call
where
he
is
actually
then
calling
TBI
k2.
B
You
will
need
to
well
you
you,
when
you
will
be
using
that
you
ad
client,
all
of
the
access.
Sorry
token
handling.
Everything
else
is
being
abstracted
from
you
and
as
long
as
you
have
granted
the
permissions
using
that
ID
and
you'll
pick
it
to
go,
and
that's
it
basically
in
general,
I
think
I've
been
I've
been
saying
this
for
a
long
long
time,
since
we
actually
were
able
to
make
this
happen.
Yes,
pfx
really
the
calling
securely
custom
API
in
usher
from
SPF
X.
B
It
is
the
holy
grail
scenario
Chevron
because
that's
where
you
can
actually
expose
business,
oriented
data,
customer
specific
data
in
the
front
page
of
the
portal
or
right
Microsoft
team's
application,
which
is
then
using
this
layer
to
get
access
on
the
lob
data
and
exposing
that,
like
we've,
been
showing
in
our
demo.
So
unless.
C
C
A
How
abstracted
it
makes
don't
indication
and
I
definitely
like,
as
so
many
times
with
the
added
model
that
there's
so
much
time
spent
configuring
authentication
but
with
SPF
X.
It
just
works
so
that
you
know
particularly
myself,
don't
like
dealing
too
much
with
auth
stuff.
So
it's
just
I
can
I
can
as
soon
as
I
can
write
some
code.
B
B
That's
the
plumbing
come
on.
Let
me
get
rid
of
this,
so
I
can
actually
implement
whatever
I'm
introducer
absolutely
makes
them
so
that
that's
really
being
the
one
of
the
objective
of
SPF
SPF
X,
and
that's
why
teams
people
actually
wanted
to
start
playing
with
us
playing
with
us
whatever
that
means,
but
and
because
we
abstract
the
complexity
we
take
care
of
the
hosting.
B
Pretty
recently,
an
SPF
X
call
on
how
to
actually
create
modern
themes
using
a
REST
API
from
webparts
and
all
of
that
so
really
cool
stuff
and
that
there
it
is
actually
PMP
with
Part
C
manager.
How
to
make
things
happen
and
open
source
code
is
available
for
anybody
to
take
advantage
so
really
good.
This
one
was
from.
B
Me
tomorrow
and
David
basically
add
a
logo
to
hop
side
and
all
associated
sites
automatically,
so
basically
creating
a
PowerShell
and
PMP
PowerShell
for
accessing
the
hub
sites
and
then
associating
and
adding
the
logo
for
the
hub
side
and
then
all
the
sub
side
as
well.
Let's
see
what's
actually
happening
here.
I
haven't
a
double
check.
This
one
we're
looking
into
modern
sites,
we're
actually
getting
a
list
of
them
we're
getting
a
if
it's.
B
If
the
site
is
same
as
the
hub
site,
then
when
we
do
the
actual
thing,
yes
and
then
we're
actually
setting
associating
the
Loco
and
selling
that
to
the
site,
local
URL
yeah,
so
you
basically
can
easily
then
copy
and
consistent
local
for
the
hop
site
towards
all
of
the
sites
which
are
associated
to
the
hubsan.
Maybe
we
should
actually
have
a
site
design
action
for
this,
because
there
is
a
capability
with
site
designs
that
run
a
site
design
when
a
site
is
getting
associated
to
a
Hobson's
yeah.
C
B
C
A
B
C
B
Because
there
is
a
pretty
big
difference
on
artificial
intelligence
and
a
machine
learning,
but
it's
it's
a
boss
words,
but
basic
idea.
Is
that
hey?
How
do
we
execute
an
your
cognitive
services
to
analyze
the
incoming
picture,
which
has
been
associated
to
the
SharePoint
using
a
web
part?
So
I
think
in
this
case
and
then
using
a
search
for
exposing
that
in
a
web
part
as
well?
B
So
there
is
a
nice
animation
in
here
so
track
and
dropping
an
image
to
the
web
part
then
doing
a
quick
analysis
of
that
image
and
then
doing
a
query
with
on
a
similar
images
which
are
already
stored
in
a
similar.
You
know
birds
are
taking
advantage
of
the
machine
learning.
It
is
really
fast
by
the
way
and
I
think
I
can't
remember,
which
way
with.
C
B
B
But
the
machine
learning
for
vision,
recognition
is
computer
vision,
stuff.
It
was
really
impressive.
I
can't
remember
who
somebody
had
a
blog
post,
pretty
reason
there
on
that
one,
it
was
actually
Tony
Paul.
We
had
to
rewrite
boring
with
Martine,
and
then
we
analyzed
the
picture
and
saw
what
the
machine
learning
was
able
to
analyze
from
the
picture,
and
it
was
really
amazing
yeah.
What
is
it
able
to
actually
pinpoint
and
realize?
B
This
is
basically
for
administrators
to
manage
tenet
properties.
We
do
not
have
a
UI
for
managing
tenant
properties
in
shipment.
There
would
be
apathy,
reason,
powershell
commandlets
and
you
can
use
a
CLI
or
the
REST
API.
It's
actually
listed
in
here,
what's
available
for
I'm
managing
the
term
properties
for
tape
it,
why
not,
if
you're
a
tenant
administrator,
wouldn't
it
make
sense
to
have
do
tenant
purposes,
exposed
as
a
paper
and
then
easily
manage
that.
So
that's.
A
B
A
I
think
I've
used
it
before
to
store
the
application,
insights
key
and
also
the
another
zero
I
think
cognitive
services
key
as
well,
which
again
would
be
used
by
all,
is
the
effects
of
parts
in
that
tenant.
So
yes,
it's
good,
although
there
was
there's
always
the
property
bag
and
stuff,
but
then
with
no
scripts
and
everything
there's
another
complication
in
there,
but
I.
Think
then
in
properties
is
a
pretty
good
way
to
store
kind
of
conflict
data
tenant,
right,
yeah,
yeah,.
B
C
B
Yeah,
that's
basically
forever
to
our
home
was
saying
that
if
it's
a
no
script
side
collection
which,
by
default
all
of
the
modern
side
collections,
are
no
scripts
are
collections,
you
cannot
modify
probably
the
back
entry,
so
you
can
read
broke
the
back
entries,
but
you
can't
modify
them.
It's
not
supported
and
that's
why
this
sign,
and
somebody
might
argue
that
why
is
that
limitation
there,
but
I
add
there
for
a
reason:
Jesus.
There
are
reasons
behind
of
that
stand.
B
C
B
That,
because
that
there
is
a
reason
why
the
no
script
tag
actually
exists,
yes,
and
only
turneth
administrator
can
modify
that
because
you're
basically,
then
exposing
a
security
truth
within
a
tenancy.
If
you
do
it
on
yeah
cute
and
then
the
final
thing
finally
is
from
Chris
O'brien
vitamins.
Click
is
Chris
a
good
kind
to
work
with.
B
B
C
C
Yeah
but
then
in
what
in
PowerShell
in
c-sharp
in
node
in
all
of
them,
yeah
flow
I.
Think
I
wonder
how
long
it
takes
until
we
get
to
the
point
that
we
can
in
a
one
shape
or
another,
have
like
not
coding
things
that
we
need
to
get
and
re-implement,
but
things
that
we
can
just
call
and
we'll
work
like
common
functions
or
come
on
flows.
C
C
If
is
think
about
right,
there
are
people
who
work
in
PowerShell.
If
you
would
give
them
sharp
code,
don't
work
so
they
will
need
so
they
will
be
on
our
group.
There
there's
another
group
like
me
who
works
in
node.
Well,
then
you
for
them,
you
have
to
do
it
and
know
and
like
it
seems
like
doing
the
same
thing
over
and
over
again,
like
I.
Think.
C
And
I
guess,
like
the
biggest
need
that
I
see,
for
that
is
the
API
for
the
modern
page
to
add
a
webpart.
We
move
over
like
this,
because
complexity
of
that
is
immense
and
it
changes
regularly
yeah
and
whenever
there
is
like
some
div
would
change
or
some
class
or
some
hierarchy,
and
that's
perfectly
fine,
because
pages
API
pages
DOM
is
not
an
API.
So
I
understand
that
you
guys
said:
Microsoft
have
the
right
to
change
that,
but
the
world
needs
a
official
way
to
interact
with
the
page
and
elements
on
it.
C
B
B
B
It
is
it's
well,
this
is
a
classic
discussion.
We've
been
having
this
at
such
many
times
so
as
we
know
that
we
need
to
have
a
modern
age,
his
baby
yeah.
We
know
that
that
has
to
happen,
but
then,
at
the
same
time
we
need
to
get
the
modern
pages
on
certain
level
and
guess
what
it's
the
same
set
of
Engineers.
So
we
when
do
actually,
when
do
we
actually
are
agreeing
that
the
betas
are
in
the
right
level
and
then
we're
starting
blended,
the
API
and
we
splits
the
engineers.
C
B
C
B
A
B
C
C
B
A
B
B
A
C
B
I've
created
on
the
four-wheel
drive,
but
they
don't
have
any
winter
tires.
So
it
was
really
nice.
Try
from
the
airport
to
the
Redman,
because
I'm
staying
in
Redmond
now
quite
often
and
and
I
there
was
like
tens
and
tens
of
cars
on
the
side,
ways
of
the
highway
and
but
it's
sweet
doesn't
even
gaps
and
caps
all
around
the
highway,
because
they're
gonna
say
oh
yeah,.
A
A
B
They're
striving
like
madman
on
on
that
snow
and
I'm
like
well
as
long
as
I
get
there.
I,
don't
have
no
rush
and
then
on
the
following
morning,
there's
food
friends
like
Frank
Marasco
and
beer
and
Burt
Johnson
was
under
on
the
town
and
they
like
in
the
morning
or
already
intervening
there's
like
a
so.
Do
you
have
a
car
yeah,
so
we'll
try
with
you
you'll
know
how
the.