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SharePoint 2010 is a significant leap forward from the 2007 release, and ′you will find that there are a ton of features built into the platform for you to leverage in your solution development. Because SharePoint is a broad platform that covers a lot, this book also covers quite a bit of ground. As a Wrox Beginning book, the goal of Beginning SharePoint 2010 Development is to get you started with many of the fundamentals so that you can continue on to advanced programming beyond this book.
In this book, you will see coverage of the following:
This book will not cover SharePoint 2007, but will cover areas that span SharePoint Foundation 2010 and SharePoint Server 2010.
The book′s goal is to quickly take you from the basics of SharePoint, to installing and configuring a development environment, and then into how you can develop for SharePoint. The book is heavy on coding exercises, but tries to stick to a common set of .NET patterns to ensure you walk away with understanding the different ways in which you can code for SharePoint. Moving from beginning to advanced means that you can expect the walkthroughs and chapters to become increasingly more complex within each chapter and throughout the book. The walkthroughs have been created to be concise and to guide you through all of the steps you must accomplish to complete a coding task.
The structure of the book mimics the development ramp–up cycle for SharePoint. That is, you must first understand the breadth of the SharePoint platform. You then install it and the development environment; and then you begin to code – simple at first, but tasks that grow increasingly more complex. You will find that when coding against SharePoint, you may do certain things more (such as programming against lists and creating custom Web Parts). As such, these topics are covered in Part II of the book. Also, you may find that, as you advance in your SharePoint development, you will need to incorporate either Silverlight or Web services in your SharePoint solutions. Because you would likely combine these types of tasks inside of a custom Web Part, list–based application, or event receiver, these were placed in Part III of the book.
Beginning SharePoint 2010 Development is aimed at the developer who is new to SharePoint. The book assumes you have some programming experience and a passion to learn how to develop for SharePoint. But this book does not assume that you′ve programmed against SharePoint before. With regard to your general development background, the two assumptions in this book are that you have some familiarity with Web development, and you have an understanding of .NET programming. With regard to Web development, this book assumes that you understand HTML, and may have an understanding of Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), Extensible Markup Language/Extensible Stylesheet Language (XML/XSL), and dynamic languages such as JavaScript. You may have a light understanding of ASP.NET and are looking to apply this knowledge to the SharePoint space. In any case, you have some understanding of the fundamentals of Web and .NET development, and are looking to apply those to the SharePoint space.
As a first–class platform that has evolved significantly since its previous release, SharePoint 2010 now provides several advancements for the developer (native Visual Studio tools support, services and extensibility enhancements, and APIs), and many new capabilities (improved data programmability, line–of–business interoperability, and sandboxed solutions). With this authoritative guide, industry veteran Steve Fox provides expert guidance on developing applications as he walks you through the fundamentals of programming, explores the developer toolset, and provides practical code examples to teach you how to use many of SharePoint′s new developer features. You′ll quickly discover how SharePoint′s rich platform supports great collaboration, extensibility, and interoperability.
Beginning SharePoint 2010 Development:
Guides you through the creation of your first SharePoint 2010 application
Addresses working with SharePoint 2010 sites, lists, and Web parts
Describes developing SharePoint applications using SharePoint Designer 2010
Reviews standard and Visual Web parts, as well as data view Web parts
Details integrating SharePoint with Microsoft® Office
Explains how to secure your SharePoint 2010 applications
Wrox Beginning guides are crafted to make learning programming languages and technologies easier than you think, providing a structured, tutorial format that will guide you through all the techniques involved.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A beta book,
By
This review is from: Beginning SharePoint 2010 Development (Wrox Beginning Guides) (Paperback)
I was looking forward to getting to grips with SP 2010 but this book has left me a little frustrated. Too many examples that seem to be written for the beta version and have changed in the final release so you spend alot of time trying to translate code into what you think it should be instead. Also, the author seems to make assumptions during the examples rather than step by step guides. The rest of the content is good, it's just a shame when books try and hit the shelves early but the ink on the product isn't dry.
Pity, I'd just read Beginning SharePoint 2010 Administration (Wrox) and I found this to be very well written with good working examples.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.2 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews) 13 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent Resource for Learning SharePoint 2010 Development,
By Scot Hillier "Scot Hillier" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Beginning SharePoint 2010 Development (Wrox Beginning Guides) (Paperback)
I have been working in the SharePoint space exclusively since 2003 and have trained hundreds of people in SharePoint development. People who are new to SharePoint need structured learning with step-by-step examples in order to be successful. This book delivers exactly the kind of learning experience that developers need to get started with SharePoint or to transition from ASP.NET development. Steve Fox is a recognized expert in SharePoint development, an excellent communicator, and someone who understands what concepts are important in the massive platform that is SharePoint. If you are trying to break into SharePoint development, you should get this book, read it cover-to-cover and work every sample.
10 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic book for those learning SharePoint 2010,
By Andrew Connell "AC" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Beginning SharePoint 2010 Development (Wrox Beginning Guides) (Paperback)
This book does a great job getting non-SharePoint developers up to speed on what it takes to become a SharePoint developer. Readers are taken through step-by-step instructions on creating certain solutions and understand when one approach makes sense over other options when SharePoint presents multiple paths to compelte a task. I'd highly recommend this book to those who want to learn SharePoint 2010.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good, but you will need to do some investigative work...,
By Craig E. Shea "fourpastmidnight" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Beginning SharePoint 2010 Development (Wrox Beginning Guides) (Paperback)
Well, the book isn't as technical as I would've liked, but I guess the author did kind of say that up front in the introduction to this book. It's not really a programmer's book for SharePoint. HOWEVER, having said that, if you've never done SharePoint development before (ever), then this would be a pretty good place to start. If you're an experienced developer with a background in ASP.Net and/or Silverlight, then you will be able to skip a good amount of stuff and just focus on what's different/new when developing in SharePoint.Why 4 stars and not 5? Well, because sometimes the instructional exercises are not clear about when/where certain steps are to be performed. As a book geared towards those who have never done SharePoint development before, this is a big deal. In fact, some of the steps are just plain wrong (it looks like the author may have been using a Beta or Release Candidate version of SharePoint 2010--based on some of the screenshots that appear in the book--but even so, there is no errata at Wrox's site. And, I didn't post one because it was too much of a pain to do so). In particular, Chapter 4, pp. 155-156, steps 7-15 are not correct. In fact, in the later steps, looking at the Site Settings page in SharePoint, there is no Look and Feel section anymore (at least, not as a major category header) and I could not find where the author was talking about to apply a custom master page that was created in this exercise as the site's master page. Other than that, though, the book is overall very good about explaining the high-level concepts pertinent to SharePoint 2010 development--and I do mean high-level; this book is really geared to brand new SharePoint developers with possibly little previous development experience. |
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