SharePoint: Extending the DVWP – Part 1: Layout Enhancement – Rearranging Columns – Default and Edit Templates
I have been reading EndUserSharePoint for several years now and have used many of the articles to solve SharePoint business requirements for my clients.
Since then I’ve been picking up what is actually possible using the Data List View Webpart in Sharepoint Designer, largely with help from Marc D Anderson and Laura Rogers and their respective blogs.
Laura Rogers, known as the Queen of the Data View Web Part, is conducting an EUSP Live Online Workshop this Friday starting at 1:00pm EST. Dynamic Feedback Forms in SharePoint is a hands-on workshop using SharePoint 2007 and SharePoint Designer.
This is the second article in a multipart series that is intended to help you creating mailing lists for your SharePoint sites or blogs without writing a single line of .NET Code. In the introductory article, I have listed the project initiatives, requirements, and objectives. In Part 1, I have created a secured backend where we will store the subscribers’ contacts. In Part 2, I have configured the ‘Contact’ content type, created a subscription form for the mailing list and did some simple customizations to it.
I was seeing what I could do to create pages a little more useful than you get using vanilla SharePoint without having to crack open Visual Studio. One of the things I wanted to do was display a SharePoint list on the screen and add a filter to the screen that would allow a user to filter the list with a date field value greater than or equal to whatever a user entered. Sound’s simple right?
Here at End User SharePoint I have been working hard to create and collect SharePoint videos for your viewing pleasure. The goal is to have an organized repository for publicly accessible SharePoint screencasts and videos.
We’re averaging about five per day so make sure to check back often.
If you find a screencast that you like, there’s [...]
Laura Rogers is putting the finishing touches on this Friday’s live online workshop, “Build a Site Permissions Dashboard – No Code Required!” The workshop is a step-by-step process for creating a dashboard panel to view and manage site permissions.
This is the final workshop of the summer, so if you’ve been saving your nickels and dimes to choose a workshop, this is the one. Check out the demo screencasts below, then register for this Friday.
In this workshop, “Build a Site Permissions Dashboard – No Code Required!”, Laura Rogers, aka @WonderLaura, will walk through the process of creating a permissions dashboard for your SharePoint site. During the workshop, you will use SharePoint Designer to create your own permissions dashboard, with no code involved, and immediately implement it on your site.
Laura Rogers walked around at SharePoint Saturday, Ozarks, all weekend and took pictures of herself with a bunch of different people If you don’t have the latest version of Flash, you might not be able to view the deck, but you can get the originals off her account at Flickr.