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Getting Started with SharePoint Designer 2010 – Part 1

As a consultant, I get this question very often: "I'd like to do this and that with SharePoint. Could you tell me how can we do that without writing any code?" Generally, my answer is one of this three:

  • "Of course, it's very simple, you have the following OOTB opportunities…"
  • "Yes, you can do it, but you need to use SharePoint Designer because of this and that…"
  • "Forget it, you need to write code."

To be honest, much of my colleagues don't like SharePoint Designer 2007 but I do and I also like the second answer. Especially since I met the SharePoint Designer 2010...

This is the first part of a huge series about SharePoint Designer 2010. If I would write for a week long it even wouldn't be enough to write about SPD 2010. So jump into that, and see what's new in this product!

My first impression was a big "wow", then a bigger one "wow", then a much bigger question mark: "but how can I use it?" - You know, SharePoint Designer also got a new user interface with ribbon, and it's so new (and so cool)… Do you remember your first experience for example about Word 2007 and the new UI? Imagine the same with SharePoint Designer 2010. Here you are, the brand new opening screen right after opening a site (in my example the site name is 'Customer Management’):

image

This opening screen has a lot of functions and options we didn't have in SharePoint Designer 2007, so we can be excited about it immediately. Some examples:

  • Inline property editor (Title and Description)
  • General info about the site (URL, SharePoint version, storage used, quota info, number of users)
  • Links to some customization
  • Enable or Disable Quick Launch, Tree View and RSS with just a click
  • My favorite part of this UI: Permissions. Finally, we can manage ste permissions from here!

Excellent, right?

But most probably you'd like to know how to find other options and menus, as the ribbon is very simple and doesn't get too much. It's very simple: if you don't see the navigation pane on the left side, just click on the site's name at the top of the window and the site menu is appearing immediately. That's it!

The mst interesting operations in this menu, in my opinion:

  • Workflows - You can manage the site's workflow right from here. Workflow designer is improved, for example you can create site workflows as well as reusable workflows!
  • Content Types - You can also manage your content types from here, including content type properties, document templates, content type IDs, etc.
  • Data Sources
  • Entities

image

More to come, stay tuned!


Posted Oct 19 2009, 06:16 PM by aghy

Comments

Peter wrote re: Getting Started with SharePoint Designer 2010 – Part 1
on Mon, Oct 19 2009 20:05

Does SPD still take up 1GB of memory and randomly crash? Does it still crash the app pool of the web server it's working against? Does it still reformat the markup of a page improperly every time you perform a Save operation?

In short,  does it work now?

All these lipstick enhancements are nice, but SPD2007 was a pig. In addition to creating a new UI, have they also fixed the core brokenness that is the SPD experience? Or is it just lipstick on a pig?

Blog del CIIN wrote SharePoint 2010: Recopilatorio de enlaces interesantes (I)!
on Mon, Nov 2 2009 0:23

Después de ‘jubilar’ al recopilatorio de enlaces interesantes sobre SharePoint 2007

SharePoint 2010: Recopilatorio de enlaces interesantes (I)! « Pasi??n por la tecnolog??a… wrote SharePoint 2010: Recopilatorio de enlaces interesantes (I)! « Pasi??n por la tecnolog??a…
on Mon, Nov 2 2009 0:23

Pingback from  SharePoint 2010: Recopilatorio de enlaces interesantes (I)! « Pasi??n por la tecnolog??a…

SamG wrote re: Getting Started with SharePoint Designer 2010 – Part 1
on Mon, Dec 14 2009 22:39

I had the same questions on my mind as Peter. SPD 2007 is the worst software product I ever had to work with (emphasis on "had to" because there is no alternative). It is buggy, it crashes, it is impossible to train the power users to use it (because of random crashes and "unexplained behavior" like mangling HTML, removing web parts from the page, high CPU utilization at times for who knows what reason...). SPD 2007 is almost unusable unless you bring a lot of patience with you or learn to restart it every 10-15 minutes before it starts doing its dance.

I tried SPD 2010 briefly and it feels just as slow and bloated. In the next two weeks, I am going to restore my monster site and try it for real, too busy with billable project now do invest any time in SPD2010.

rahul wrote re: Getting Started with SharePoint Designer 2010 – Part 1
on Mon, Jan 4 2010 18:46

This is nice post, Please keep posting sharepoint useful post.

Thanks

Rahul

http://sharepointbank.com

lazy wrote re: Getting Started with SharePoint Designer 2010 – Part 1
on Sat, Jan 9 2010 16:57

thank for information is sharepoint best artical  site

http://SharePointBank.com

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