Andrew Connell [MVP SharePoint]
1579 Posts |  42 Articles |  4864 Comments
.NET  |  MCMS  |  SharePoint  |  Office System
SharePoint Quick Links
Article Categories
Archives
Post Categories


Add to Technorati Favorites

An article I worked on has recently been published on MSDN. The article, Understanding Field Controls and Web Parts in SharePoint Server 2007 Publishing Sites, documents the differences between using field controls and Web Parts in Office SharePoint Server 2007 Publishing Sites. It contains a lot of explanation on the underpinnings of each technology and implications of picking one over the other. In addition, I spent a good bit of time talking about the Content Editor Web Part.

Here’s the article summary on MSDN:

SharePoint Server 2007 Publishing sites empower content owners to manage content on a site without involving the IT staff in the day to day management of a site. Content owners can use one of two tools provided by developers, field controls and/or Web Parts, to manage content on a page. This article covers the details of field controls and Web Parts, the differences between the two and offers best practices on when one should be used over the other.

I’d consider this required reading for anyone doing Publishing sites. Why? It is a major point of contention and one I see many organizations get themselves into rough spots on. I’ve written a few times about this issue on my blog here, here and here as well as a guest post on the ECM team blog. I’ll also be talking about it at the SharePoint Best Practices Conference in London in April. It’s also one I hear Microsoft gets a lot of support calls on. Make sure you know the difference before embarking on your next Publishing site project!

» MSDN: Understanding Field Controls and Web Parts in SharePoint Server 2007 Publishing Sites

posted on Wednesday, March 18, 2009 12:10 PM

Feedback

# re: ***NOW AVAILABLE*** MSDN: Understanding Field Controls and Web Parts in SharePoint Server 2007 Publishing Sites 3/18/2009 3:45 PM Asif Rehmani
Gravatar Nice!

# re: ***NOW AVAILABLE*** MSDN: Understanding Field Controls and Web Parts in SharePoint Server 2007 Publishing Sites 3/24/2009 4:09 AM Danny de Haas
Gravatar Great article!

# Great Article Andrew 3/30/2009 1:36 PM Tyler Holmes
Gravatar Excellent article. I wish I could get this kind of excellent guidance from Microsoft. Loved the the Feature Receiver and the Control Adapter, goes to show just how resourceful we can be when working with SharePoint.

Tip of the hat to you!

Best,
Tyler

Post Feedback

Title:
Name:
Email:
(email will not be displayed)
Url:
Comments: 
Please add 5 and 8 and type the answer here:    
All Comments Are Filtered & Moderated
Unfortunately comment spammers are just too effecient and are constantly dirtying up blogs with irrelevant and unwanted comments trying to improve their standing on search engines. All comments on this blog are moderated. I do not censor comments, but I don't approve comments with vulger language or those soliciting products. Most of the time comments are approved within a few hours of being submitted with the only exception when I'm traveling.

Why are you asking for my email address?
The only reason I'm asking for your email address, which isn't required to submit a comment, is to provide a gravatar if you've created an account for yourself and associated your email address with a small image. If you have a gravatar created for the email address you submit, it will appear next to your comment. Otherwise nothing will appear.

What is a gravatar?
A gravatar is a "globally recognized avatar." You can get more information about gravatars, as well as create your own for free, at www.gravatar.com. You can also view my gravatar here.


Copyright © 2003 - 2010 Andrew Connell
Creative Commons License 
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License
Site design by Heather Solomon.

 
 
MOSS WCM Training
Looking for MOSS 2007 WCM developer training? Look no further! I teach my 5-day hands-on and online WCM classes for developers I offer through my company: Critical Path Training.

Get more information on the WCM courses!