SharePoint 2010 : Specify the Item Limit for a View |
You can specify an item limit on a view. An item limit on a view enables you to either specify the maximum number of items that are displayed in the view or specify the maximum number of items that are displayed in each page in a view. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Specify Totals for a View |
You want to include a mathematical calculation on a column in a view. For example, you want the view to show an average of the numbers in a certain column or the total of another. For example, you have a number column called Number of Leave Days that is used to track how many leave days have been requested by a contact, and you want to create a view that displays the average leave requested by everyone in the list. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Specify How Items in a View Are Sorted |
You want to specify how a view should sort the items. For example, in a contacts list, you want it to sort on the Last Name column in ascending order so that Adams is before Brahms. Furthermore, if two people have the same last name, you want them sorted by their first names, so that Anne Adams appears before Brenda Adams. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Specify the Order of the Columns in a View |
When creating or editing a view in a list or library, you want to specify a different order for the columns that are displayed to the user in the view. For example, in a contacts list, you want the first name to be displayed before the last name or vice versa. |
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Preparing for SharePoint 2010 Installation (part 2) |
Planning is essential for every part of implementing SharePoint 2010, and a crucial part of preparing for the installation involves planning the various Active Directory accounts that will be needed during the installation and throughout your SharePoint implementation |
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Preparing for SharePoint 2010 Installation (part 1) |
The following sections cover the requirements of a SharePoint installation as well as the tasks you must complete before performing the installation. You will discover that there are different ways to prepare the server for an installation of SharePoint 2010 |
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Introducing SharePoint 2010 Installation Types |
Your first installation decision is selecting the appropriate SharePoint product for your implementation. After careful analysis, you can decide which edition will meet your organization’s needs. SharePoint 2010 is offered in two categories, with four editions within each of the categories—a total of eight editions from which you can choose |
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Sharepoint 2010 : Optimizing Outside of SQL Server |
If the server that is hosting SQL Server is dedicated to only SQL Server, there are some additional changes that can be made to help optimize SQL Server and improve the SharePoint experience for your end users. Some of these changes also can be applied to any volumes that are dedicated to SQL Server data. |
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Sharepoint 2010 : Add a Content Type to a List or Document Library |
To add a content type to a list or library, you first enable management of content types in that list or library. To do so, go to the list or document library settings page by switching to the List ribbon or Library ribbon and clicking the List Settings or Library Settings button. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Change the Document Template for the New Button in a Document Library |
You want to change what kind of document is created when the user clicks the New button in a document library. For example, say that you want to make the New button create a Microsoft PowerPoint presentation out of a specific template in the document library that is specific for presentations. Or say that you want a Microsoft Excel template for expense reports to open in the Expense Reports document library. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Change the Versioning Settings for a List or Document Library |
You want to change how a list or library deals with storing versions for documents and list items. For example, say that a document library was created with versioning turned off, and you want to turn it on. Or say that a library was created and configured to have versioning but not to support automatic check-out of a document when a user opens a document for editing, and you want to change that. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Rename a List or Document Library or Change Its Description |
You want to rename a list or document library, or you want to change the description shown for that list or library. For example, say that a library was created with the name Documents, and you want to modify it to a name that tells the user more about the types of documents that should be uploaded to that library—Management Presentations, for example. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Branching in Surveys |
You want to make it easier for the user to answer a survey by displaying the questions in the survey in different pages. Additionally, A survey has a lot of questions, and depending on the answer to some of them you may or may not want answers to other questions. |
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Sharepoint 2010 : Enforce Custom Validation on a List or Library |
You want to configure more complex validation for columns to prevent users from entering conflicting information in two different fields. For example, if you have two date columns, Starting Time and Due Date, you want to make sure users enter a bigger value in the Due Date column. |
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SharePoint 2010 : Choose a Column Type (part 9) |
The Managed Metadata column type is available only when you have SharePoint Server installed (not SPF). It is similar to the Lookup column type in the fact that it, too, displays options to the user from a predefined list of options that is not part of the column itself. |
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