Squaretwo.Blog.Net Development, Blogging, Food, Folks, and Fun.Setting up your MOSS 2007 Development Environment- March 23, 2007 As Daniel mentioned in his comment to my last post: Is it me or now in version 1 the installation checks if WSS are installed in the computer (invalidating XP as development platform) As it turns out, no, it's not just him - and I'm mildly annoyed by it. Only mildly because there's probably a good reason why you need SharePoint installed locally (though I really hope it's not due to shoddy coding) - but still annoyed that there was no mention of this when.http://blogs.squaretwo.net/PermaLink.aspx?guid=db446ebe-f683-4ec1-a827-abafcf9a006e Ask, and Ye Shall Receive: WSS3.0 VS 2005 Extensions have hit RTM!- March 20, 2007 I know, I know... It must've only gone online but a few hours after my last post, but Pierre Vivier-Merle kindly pointed out to me that Microsoft has finally published the RTM version of the SharePoint extenstions for Visual Studio 2005! Download the Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 Tools: Visual Studio 2005 Extensions as soon as you can if you do any kind of serious SharePoint development. Crossposted from Hurlman.Tech - please update your RSS feed to...http://blogs.squaretwo.net/PermaLink.aspx?guid=5fbd4966-e268-4ea3-9e18-c09bd5958032 Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 Tools: Visual Studio 2005 Extensions for Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 - In CTP Limbo- March 15, 2007 Link to Download details: Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 Tools: Visual Studio 2005 Extensions for Windows SharePoint Services 3.0 The WSS 3.0 Add-in for VS 2005 has been stuck on the November 2006 CTP version, since, well, November 2006. It's halfway thru March '07 now - are we ever going to see an update A beta RTM Both WSSMOSS and VS are released products, making them work nicely together shouldn't be much more of a challenge. No mention..http://blogs.squaretwo.net/PermaLink.aspx?guid=aab718ef-734c-4b2f-8cc3-fe25dbebd886 SharePoint 2007 Googlefood- March 13, 2007 More and more over the last two weeks, I have become increasingly amazed about two things. First off, the good people at Microsoft that coded up the API for SharePoint 2007 (and, I hear, 2003) decided to provide either no or meaningless documentation on just about any useful object in the object model. On any project I managed, one of my unbreakable demandments was that any public-facing function, object or object property had to have at least the default...http://blogs.squaretwo.net/PermaLink.aspx?guid=9fb55276-4b62-4585-b701-bb45bcc69724 |