SharePoint For Dummies. Rosemarie Withee

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SharePoint For Dummies - Rosemarie Withee


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you are ready to publish your page, click the Publish button that appears in the upper-right corner.Your page will be published and you will be offered some common tasks such as adding the page to your SharePoint site’s navigation, posting the new page as News on the site, emailing the page, sending the page to Yammer, saving the page as a template to create additional pages, and copying a direct link to the page.

Snapshot of creating a new SharePoint page.

      FIGURE 3-2: Creating a new SharePoint page.

      You learn how to create different types of pages in Chapter 6.

      The four primary types of pages that can be created and developed from the browser in SharePoint are:

       Site page

       Wiki page

       Web Part page

       Publishing page

      Following is a brief overview of the four types of SharePoint pages.

Snapshot of adding content to a new SharePoint page.

      FIGURE 3-3: Adding content to a new SharePoint page.

      Site page

      A Site page, which is the page you created in the earlier exercise, is a standard page that allows you to add components and content without needing much up-front planning. Using a Site page, you can quickly get content onto a page and shared with others around your organization. The Site page is new and was designed to make the onramp to using SharePoint less of a burden for newcomers.

      

The default page that is created when you select Add a Page from the Site Settings gear icon is a Site page.

      Wiki page

      A Wiki page, also known as a content page, is the Swiss Army knife of pages and allows for easy development and customization using a rich text editor built right into the browser. A Wiki page is easy to develop and is an extremely powerful and intuitive collaboration, data capture, and documentation tool.

      Web Part page

      Web Parts are discussed later in this chapter and in more detail in Chapter 6.

      Publishing page

      The Publishing page is designed to separate the functionality between managing content and managing the look and feel of the page. A Publishing page is only available when certain features are turned on by site administrators. All Publishing pages live in a special library called Pages. The Pages library is created automatically when the publishing features are turned on for the site. These pages use a special library because the Pages library already has preconfigured functionality such as versioning and workflow that is designed for the management and distribution of content, or in other words, publishing content.

      

The Publishing page is only available when the publishing feature has been activated at the site collection and site level.

      Chapter 6 covers creating and developing pages.

      A Web Part is one of those fairly rare things in technology that has a descriptive name: A Web Part is a part of a web page. You can think of a Web Part as a bundled piece of web functionality that can be added to a SharePoint page. For example, you will find web parts to add the list and library apps you have created on your site.

      

The Web Parts that are available out of the box depend on how your SharePoint implementation was set up and which features are activated.

      In addition to the Web Parts that ship with SharePoint, you can also add custom Web Parts to the Web Part Gallery. A number of third-party developers create Web Parts that can be purchased; Web Parts can also be developed by in-house SharePoint developers.

      Web Parts are covered in more detail in Chapter 6.

Snapshot of the Web Part Gallery in SharePoint.

      FIGURE 3-4: The Web Part Gallery in SharePoint.

      Terminology is often a central point of confusion in most technology. SharePoint is no different. For example, the term feature means some sort of functionality or grouping of functionality. In SharePoint, the word feature has a very technical meaning: a collection of SharePoint functionality that can be activated and deactivated. When SharePoint programmers hear the term feature, they immediately think of a particular technical part of SharePoint. SharePoint programmers can bundle together a grouping of functionality they have developed for SharePoint into a single feature. Programmers might develop a bundle of functionality and package the entire thing into a single feature that users can activate or deactivate. For example, if you work in financial services, you might need a number of workflows, pages, images, and custom Web Parts on your SharePoint site. A programmer could build all of this functionality for you and package it all into a feature. When you’re ready to use the functionality, you activate the financial services feature.

      Features are covered in detail in Chapter 18.

Snapshot of the Mobile Browser View feature in SharePoint.

      FIGURE 3-5: The Mobile Browser View feature in SharePoint.

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