Quick u Easy: Oħloq Your Own Sandbox jQuery għall SharePoint

Dan huwa post ieħor tiegħi serje għaddejjin dwar kif tuża jQuery ma SharePoint.
Jekk inti tixtieq titgħallem aktar dwar jQuery, I jirrakkomanda ħafna: jQuery fl-Azzjoni billi Bear Bibeault u Yehuda Katz.

Getting beda bil jQuery fl SharePoint hija sorprendentement faċli (lili). (I do have serious questions about a “best practices” approach to deploying these things to production, but that’s for another day). I’ve just started playing with this technology and to that end, I created a sandbox environment to use. If you’re looking to get started with jQuery, you may find this approach useful.

1. Create a Blank Site

Create a blank site somewhere in your site and call it something clever like “jQuery Sandbox”.

2. Download jQuery

You can download the jQuery javascript library from here: http://docs.jquery.com/Downloading_jQuery

Save that to to your desktop.

I have been using the “minified” version.

3. Create a SharePoint Document Library

In your sandbox site, create a document library.

4. Upload the jQuery Library to SharePoint

Access the doc library you just created and upload the jQuery library.

5. Create a Custom SharePoint List

I’ve started with a custom list because I want to muck about with standard SharePoint forms. You could also create a page in a pages library or web part pages and probably a lot of other places.

Add some columns to the custom list so that you have something to run jQuery against. My initial objectives were to:

  1. Hide a field.
  2. Assign a value to a field.

With that objective in mind, I added two text fields. Maż-żmien, I’ll be playing with links, images, lookups, eċċ.

6. Modify the NewForm.aspx Web Part Page and Add a Content Editor Web Part

This is a little black magic-ish , in that it’s a new concept to me. I first learned about this from Paul Grenier, SharePoint jQuery Superstar, at his CodePlex project site: http://spff.codeplex.com/.

Follow these steps to add a CEWP to the same page that shows NewForm.aspx for any custom list:

  1. Access the custom list and click New.
  2. Append the following to the URL: PageView=Shared&ToolPaneView=2

That will transform your boring vanilla data entry form from something like this:

image

To this:

image

Add the content editor web part to the page.

7. Write Your First jQuery Code

Open up that CEWP in the code view and add the following:

image

Here’s the actual code if you want to copy/paste:

<script
    type="text/javascript"
    src ="../../jQuery%20Library/jquery-1.3.2.min.js">
</iskrittura>

<tip b'kitba ="text/javascript">
  $(funzjoni() {

    $('#resultsID').html('There are ' + $('a').size() + ' a tags tags on this page.');

  });
</iskrittura>

Riżultat:
<div id='resultsID'></div>
/result

Note that the first <iskrittura> tag is referencing the actual jQuery library. Presumably, these things change over time, so you’ll want to make sure you a) use the right name and b) point it to the correct SharePoint document library.

Bask in the Glory

If you did it correctly, you’ll see a result similar to the following:

image

Wrapping Up

This isn’t the only way to get started, but it’s quick, easy and isolated from your existing SharePoint environment.

</aħħar>

Abbona għall-blog tiegħi.

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2 ħsibijiet dwar "Quick u Easy: Oħloq Your Own Sandbox jQuery għall SharePoint

  1. sujith krish

    Have you noticed that adding CEWP in editform.aspx would break the page and version information section shows up in the UI? Any workarounds for this?

    Anyone ?

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