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SharePoint 2010 For Dummies
SharePoint 2010 For Dummies
SharePoint 2010 For Dummies
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SharePoint 2010 For Dummies

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Here's the bestselling guide on SharePoint 2010, updated to cover Office 365

SharePoint Portal Server is an essential part of the enterprise infrastructure for many businesses. The Office 365 version includes significantly enhanced cloud capabilities. This second edition of the bestselling guide to SharePoint covers getting a SharePoint site up and running, branded, populated with content, and more. It explains ongoing site management and offers plenty of advice for administrators who want to leverage SharePoint and Office 365 in various ways.

  • Many businesses today rely on SharePoint Portal Server to aggregate SharePoint sites, information, and applications into a single portal
  • This updated edition covers the enhanced cloud capacities of Office 365 and Microsoft SharePoint Online
  • Shows how to use SharePoint to leverage data centers and collaborate with both internal and external customers, including partners and clients
  • Covers getting a site up and running, populating it with content, branding it, and managing the site long term

Administrators and small-business website managers will find SharePoint 2010 For Dummies, 2nd Edition gives them the information they need to make the most of this technology.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherWiley
Release dateJun 13, 2012
ISBN9781118283646
SharePoint 2010 For Dummies

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    Book preview

    SharePoint 2010 For Dummies - Vanessa L. Williams

    Part I

    Collaborating with Team Sites

    9781118273814-pp0101.eps

    In this part . . .

    In this part, I kick off your SharePoint 2010 exploration with foundational stuff, such as introducing team sites, explaining what they are and why you might want one, and setting up one. I also show you how to upload documents to SharePoint, use lists to manage documents and other kinds of content, and how to keep an eye on things that interest you by setting alerts on lists and libraries. Finally, I cover how you can use SharePoint Workspace to work offline with SharePoint content.

    Chapter 1

    Getting to Know Your Team Site

    In This Chapter

    arrow Requesting a new team site and opening it in the browser

    arrow Participating in a team site

    arrow Changing your team site’s home page

    One of the fundamental kinds of websites that SharePoint 2010 allows you to create is a team site. A team site is a SharePoint site that you can use to collaborate with your coworkers. If the team site is hosted in your company’s extranet or in the cloud by a public hosting service, such as Microsoft Office 365 SharePoint Online, you may even be able to collaborate with people outside your organization. In most cases, an administrator will create a team site for you.

    Many kinds of teams can use a SharePoint team site to collaborate. For example:

    check.png Department members can use document libraries to upload document files and enter meetings in a team calendar.

    check.png Project members can use a team site home page to post announcements and track issues and risks.

    check.png Corporate communications can use a team site to store the documents and track the tasks required for preparing the company’s annual report.

    You need to know your way around some of the basic features of a team site, which is exactly what I show you in this chapter.

    Requesting Your Team Site

    Most organizations have a process for requesting a team site. I’ve seen everything from the simple process in which you send an e-mail addressed to someone in your IT department to very detailed wizards that walk you through the site creation process. One company requires that you write a justification for why you want the team site and then submit prototypes.

    Whatever you have to do to get your SharePoint 2010 team site, get one. At a minimum, you need to provide your SharePoint administrator with this information to get a team site:

    check.png The site name: The friendly caption that appears in the header of your site and in any site directory where your site may be listed.

    check.png The site template: The template determines what kind of site SharePoint makes for you. SharePoint includes dozens of predefined site templates. Your company may even create its custom site templates. Tell your administrator you want a team site, which is the most popular of all the SharePoint 2010 site templates.

    check.png The web address or URL: The unique location where your team site is hosted. In most organizations, all team sites are located off the same root web address. Some examples I’ve seen include

    http://intranet.company.com/sites

    http://portal/projectsites

    http://sharepoint/sites

    I discuss the detailed steps of how to create a new site in Chapter 7. For now, I’m going to assume you have someone to create one for you.

    Your organization may also ask who has permission to access the site. By default, all SharePoint team sites have three basic kinds of users, which are called SharePoint groups:

    check.png Visitors have Read Only permission. They can view your site without making any contributions.

    check.png Members can participate in your team site by uploading and editing documents or adding tasks or other items.

    check.png Owners have Full Control permission to customize the site. As the person requesting the team site, the SharePoint administrator likely assumes that you’re the proud owner unless you specifically tell him who owns the site.

    You’ll need to decide which users fit into which of these three SharePoint Groups. SharePoint offers more than just these three groups, and you can create your own groups to meet your needs. I discuss SharePoint groups and permissions in more detail in Chapter 13.

    Your site’s users must be connected physically to your network or have permission from your network administrator to access your network remotely. Some companies set up a special kind of deployment for SharePoint, or an extranet, that provides a secure way for non-employees to log in to their SharePoint team sites without actually being on the internal company network.

    Setting up SharePoint in an extranet environment can be done in lots of ways. Configuring a SharePoint extranet in your company’s network can be complex and is outside the scope of this book. However, the good news is that SharePoint Online, which is part of the Office 365 suite, eliminates many of the technical barriers to creating an extranet. In Chapter 24, I walk you through the steps to use SharePoint Online to create an extranet for collaborating with clients.

    Viewing Your Team Site in the Browser

    To access your team site, you use a web browser, such as Internet Explorer, Google Chrome, or Mozilla Firefox. You need the web address or URL of your team site, which you can get from your SharePoint administrator. You also need a network user account with permissions to access the team site.

    In my case, the web address for my team site is

    http://intranet.contoso.com

    To access your team site:

    1. Open your web browser.

    2. Type the web address for your team site in the address bar and press Enter.

    Figure 1-1 shows the home page for a SharePoint team site.

    Figure 1-1: A SharePoint team site home page.

    9781118273814-fg0101.tif
    Choosing between IE, Chrome, and Firefox

    Which browser should you use with SharePoint? Firefox, Chrome, and Internet Explorer browsers have some differences; for instance, some pages look better in Firefox or Chrome than in Internet Explorer. Because Chrome and Firefox were designed to be OS-agnostic, they support Mac users as well as PC users. Microsoft has worked hard to make the experience the same in all mainstream browsers, however there are a few scenarios that don’t work. For example, you can’t upload multiple documents or open Windows Explorer using a non-Microsoft browser. The bottom line is that if you think something should work and it isn’t currently working, try the same thing in a different browser, then choose the one that works the best and is speedy.

    All SharePoint team sites have the same features. If you’re using a new team site, your site should match the one in Figure 1-1. If your site has been customized, it may look slightly different. Never fear: All the same features are still there. You may just have to hunt a little bit to find them.

    Your team site may not have the I Like It and Tags & Notes buttons in the upper right corner of the screen. You must have permission to use SharePoint 2010’s social features to see these buttons. I recommend asking your administrator to explore these features if they are currently disabled. I discuss the social features of SharePoint 2010 in more detail in Part III.

    You can think of the SharePoint page as having the following major sections:

    check.png Header: The header spans the entire top of the page. You can think of the header in a SharePoint page like the menu in a traditional Windows application, such as Microsoft Word. SharePoint 2010 even features the Ribbon in the page header, similar to how the Ribbon appears in the top of many Office applications.

    check.png Left navigation pane: The navigation pane provides quick access to the site’s document libraries, lists, and discussion boards. You can even add links to content you create, such as documents and web pages.

    check.png Page content: The content displays in the body of the page.

    Generally speaking, the header and left navigation pane stay fairly consistent, whereas the body of the page changes to display the content for the web page. This is very similar to how most websites work. For a more detailed explanation of the layout of a team site, see Chapter 8.

    tip.eps Microsoft has spent a lot of money on usability research to determine how best to lay out the pages in SharePoint. That’s why I usually encourage my clients to use the layouts provided by Microsoft instead of creating their own custom layouts for team sites.

    Accessing Team Sites in Office 365

    Accessing a site that is hosted in Office 365 may be a little different than sites that are hosted on your network. You may access your site through the main Office 365 portal URL, which is http://portal.microsoftonline.com.

    Depending on how your company has configured its connection with Office 365, you may not be prompted to log in to Office 365. However, in my experience, most small to medium size companies don’t bother integrating their logins, so you will probably have to use your Office 365 username and password, which will be different from your account for your internal network.

    I discuss the pros and cons of integrating your network logins with Office 365 in Part VII.

    technicalstuff.eps Single sign-on is the name of the technology that enables your internal network login to be integrated with Office 365. As the name implies, you only have to sign into the network once to access all network services, regardless of where those services live.

    Figure 1-2 shows an example of the login screen for Office 365. You may want check the boxes for Remember Me and Keep Me Signed In so you aren’t prompted continuously to log in to Office 365. You will still get prompted occasionally to change your password or verify your password.

    Figure 1-2: Logging in to Office 365.

    9781118273814-fg0102.tif

    Figure 1-3 shows the Office 365 main portal page for a user who has access to all the features of Office 365. In addition to SharePoint Online, it includes Exchange Online, Lync Online, and Microsoft Office 2010 Professional Plus. If your subscription only covers SharePoint Online, you won’t see these other options.

    You can click the Team Site link at the very top of the page or the Visit SharePoint Home link under the Team Site heading to reach your company’s default team site.

    Alternatively, your administrator may give you the direct link to your team site. In that case, you would bypass the screen in Figure 1-3. However, you still have to log in to Office 365 if your company doesn’t have the logins integrated.

    Figure 1-3: The main Office 365 portal home page.

    9781118273814-fg0103.tif

    Contributing to a Team Site

    One of the main purposes of a team site is to allow its members to collaborate. But collaborate on what? Think of all the stuff that you do with Outlook and e-mail right now — all the documents you send as attachments, contacts you track, and messages you send with announcements. Now imagine doing all those same tasks in a website you share with your coworkers or project members.

    Now take that one step further. Think about any public websites you use to network with other people, such as MySpace, LinkedIn, or Facebook. You can use your team site along with other features in SharePoint to create a community of people that you collaborate with at work.

    Uploading documents

    Most teams need to share documents. You probably use e-mail to send documents as attachments. With your new SharePoint 2010 team site, you can upload your files to the team site and send your team members a link to the document.

    SharePoint 2010 uses a special kind of container — a document library — for storing files. Your team site has a document library dubbed Shared Documents where you can put documents you want to share with others. You can create additional document libraries and give them any name you want. See Chapter 2 for more details on working with files and document libraries in SharePoint 2010.

    To upload a document to the Shared Documents library in your team site:

    1. Click the Shared Documents link in the left navigation pane of your team site.

    The Shared Documents library appears.

    remember.eps You can click the All Site Content link in the left navigation pane to view a list of all the document libraries that you have permission to access.

    2. Click the Upload Document button on the Documents tab of the SharePoint Ribbon.

    The Upload Document window appears.

    3. Click the Browse button and, in the Choose File dialog box, select a file to upload.

    4. Click OK to upload the file to the document library.

    When the file is uploaded, SharePoint displays the document’s properties in a new window, as shown in Figure 1-4.

    5. Type the filename, title, and any keywords that you want to tag the document with in the Name, Title, and Enterprise Keywords text boxes, respectively.

    See Chapter 2 for details on working with document properties.

    6. Click the Save button to save the properties you’ve entered for the document.

    The uploaded document appears in the document library.

    Figure 1-4: SharePoint displays a document’s properties in a new window.

    9781118273814-fg0104.tif

    Making an announcement

    Any time you upload a document or post content to your team site, I recommend getting into the habit of creating an announcement. Instead of firing off an e-mail telling co-workers you’ve just updated that spreadsheet, post an announcement. That way people can subscribe to the site’s announcement list (see Chapter 5) and automatically receive an e-mail notification.

    To create a new announcement:

    1. Click the All Site Content link in the left navigation pane.

    The All Site Content page appears. This page displays all the lists, libraries, discussion forums, and sites you have permission to access.

    2. Click the Announcements link in the Lists section to open the Announcements list.

    You may have to scroll down to see the Lists section.

    3. Click the Add New Announcement link.

    4. In the Announcements dialog box, use the Title field to briefly summarize your announcement. Describe the announcement in more detail in the Body, as shown in Figure 1-5.

    If you enter an expiration date for your announcement in the Expires field, the announcement will no longer appear display by default.

    5. Click the Save button to save your announcement.

    Figure 1-5: Use announcements instead of e-mail.

    9781118273814-fg0105.tif
    Why properties?

    You may wonder why SharePoint 2010 prompts you to enter properties for your document. The properties that you enter — properties like the filename, title, and keywords — can be used to make it easier for other site users to find your document. SharePoint 2010’s search feature indexes these properties so that users can search for them. You can also add new properties to your documents to make them easier to search for. In addition to search, you can use properties to create a list of documents that match a certain property’s value. For example, say you have a set of documents with a Sales Territory property. You could display a subset of those documents on your team site’s home page that match a certain territory’s name. If you really want to become an expert on using properties with SharePoint, see Part V.

    tip.eps You can add tasks, contacts, calendar events, and even new discussion topics just as easily as adding new announcements. See Chapter 3 for details on this.

    Social networking

    SharePoint 2010 lets you do some exciting things with social networking, which is a fancy way of referring to ways that people can share ideas, insights, and information among groups of users, such as sharing links with your friends on Facebook.

    For example, SharePoint 2010 lets you tag things so that you can find them later and that people with whom you share your tags and notes also can see them. So for example, if you find a document that you like and want to encourage others in your network to read, you can apply a tag to the document and then that tag is associated with you so others viewing your profile can see the tag.

    remember.eps Don’t panic: SharePoint 2010 tags and notes can be made private so that only you can see them, and you can also delete your tags whenever you want.

    To tag a document:

    1. Browse to the library containing the document and then select the document using the check box in the list view, as shown in Figure 1-6.

    Figure 1-6: Select a document to tag.

    9781118273814-fg0106.tif

    2. Click the I Like It button on the Document tab, as shown in Figure 1-7.

    SharePoint briefly displays the Add Tag confirmation message, and the item is saved to your tags and notes, visible to your colleagues in your profile Tags and Notes tab.

    Figure 1-7: Click the I Like It button.

    9781118273814-fg0107.tif

    I cover user profiles and social networking in detail in Part III.

    To view your tags and notes:

    1. Click the arrow beside your name in the upper-right corner of the page and choose My Profile from the drop-down list.

    Your profile page displays.

    2. Click the Tags and Notes tab, as shown in Figure 1-8.

    In the Activities For section of the page, you see an entry for the tag you just entered.

    3. Select the Make Private check box beside any activity so that only you can see it.

    Now only you can see the item you marked as private.

    Figure 1-8: The Tags and Notes profile page.

    9781118273814-fg0108.tif

    SharePoint 2010 has other social networking features in addition to tags; you can see some of them by exploring your profile, and I talk a little more about them in Chapter 17, too.

    Customizing Your Team Site

    Most teams want to change their team site right away. As the site owner, you’ll likely be asked to make these changes. Some of the changes you can make include adding and removing text and images from the home page and adding new lists and libraries. You can even change the site’s color scheme and logo, which I discuss how to do in Chapter 14.

    For now, stick to changing the home page. Later chapters in this part walk you through the process of working with lists and libraries.

    Introducing the Ribbon

    The header of the SharePoint 2010 team site page boasts the Ribbon. The Ribbon was introduced in Office 2007 and is a convenient way to display many menu items in a small amount of screen space.

    The Ribbon in SharePoint 2010 features menu items that are relevant to the kind of page you’re viewing, arranged in tabs. For example, the home page of a team site displays two tabs: Browse and Page. You find most of the menu commands you need to use on the Ribbon, and some Ribbon buttons contain drop-down lists. Figure 1-9 shows the Ribbon with the Page tab active and the Edit drop-down list displayed.

    tip.eps Document libraries and lists display commands on the Ribbon that provide additional configuration options. These commands are contextual because the commands that appear depend on the context of where you are in the site.

    Figure 1-9: Use the Ribbon to access menu commands.

    9781118273814-fg0109.tif

    Modifying the home page

    A SharePoint 2010 team site creates a home page that you can modify to better meet your team’s needs. You can add text or images, or display your announcements, tasks, or calendar items.

    You must be logged in to your site as a user with permissions to modify the site’s pages. That usually means you need to belong to the site’s Members group.

    remember.eps The site’s Members group has contribute permissions by default, which includes add, edit, and delete. See Chapter 13 for details on managing permissions.

    technicalstuff.eps The home page of a team site is a wiki page. Wiki pages provide a richer content editing experience than Web Part pages. I discuss the kinds of web pages in SharePoint in Chapter 8.

    To put the home page in Edit mode:

    1. Browse to the home page of your team site and then click the Page tab in the Ribbon.

    The Ribbon displays a set of editing options for the web page.

    2. Click the Edit button in the Edit section of the Ribbon.

    The page appears in Edit mode.

    tip.eps If you want to lock the page so no one else can edit it at the same time, click the Check Out button in the Edit section of the Ribbon before placing the page in Edit mode.

    With the page in Edit mode, you can place your cursor anywhere inside the rectangular boxes in the page’s body to edit the content. For example, to change the default text that appears on the home page, with your page in Edit mode, do the following:

    1. Place your cursor in front of the Welcome text.

    2. Delete the placeholder text and type your new text.

    3. Use the formatting options displayed in the Ribbon’s Format Text tab to apply changes to your text, such as changing the font and adding bullet points.

    You can even apply styles, as shown in Figure 1-10.

    Figure 1-10: Apply formatting changes to your text with the Ribbon.

    9781118273814-fg0110.tif

    tip.eps SharePoint 2010 provides tools for formatting and editing your text in the browser.

    4. Click the Stop Editing button to save your changes.

    remember.eps If you have your page checked out, click the Check In button when you’re done making changes.

    To add a table, image, link, or Web Part to your home page:

    1. Place your page in Edit mode by clicking the Edit button on the Page tab in the Ribbon.

    2. Click the Insert tab on the Ribbon to display your insert options and then place your cursor on the page where you want to insert an item from the Ribbon.

    remember.eps You must place your cursor inside one of the rectangular boxes within the page’s body.

    3. Click the button for the content item you want to add (see Figure 1-11):

    For a table, click the Table button and then select the number of rows and columns you want in your table.

    For an image, click the Image button and then select whether you want to upload the image from your local computer or from another web address.

    For hyperlinked text, click the Link button to add it to your page.

    For a Web Part, click the Web Part button to add it to your page. See Chapter 9 for more details on working with Web Parts.

    4. Click the Edit tab and then click the Stop Editing button to save your changes.

    Figure 1-11: Use the Ribbon to add links, images, and tables.

    9781118273814-fg0111.tif
    Chapter 2

    Sharing Your Documents

    In This Chapter

    arrow Understanding what document libraries are and why they’re superior to file shares

    arrow Discovering lots of ways to get your documents into document libraries

    arrow Working with (and deleting) your documents

    arrow Retrieving a document after it has been deleted

    You’re probably familiar with network file shares: the file systems that let people upload files to a shared network drive so that other people can access and use them. File shares, when they were invented, revolutionized the ability of organizations to keep files in relatively secure locations and manage who had access. But SharePoint has done the file share one (okay, a whole bunch) better.

    SharePoint document libraries let you store and share files securely, and they also add features that help you manage things like document workflow (the processes that let people edit, comment on, and approve documents) and version histories (what happened to a file, and who did what). And although file shares give you one path through folders to your document, SharePoint document libraries give you other paths to expose content. You can access documents directly through the browser, you can bubble them up in Web Parts, and you can sort and filter them with their metadata and content types. And with document libraries, you can expose files by their title, not just their filename.

    Document libraries give you multiple choices about how the documents get into them, too. You can save a document to a document library using a Microsoft Office client such as Word or Excel, or you can e-mail documents to document libraries or drag and drop from Windows Explorer. And you can create documents directly in their document libraries.

    No matter how you get your documents into SharePoint’s document libraries, just get them there. Because it’s so much easier to share documents with your co-workers in a document library than it is to use file shares or e-mail attachments.

    As I discuss in Chapter 3, everything in SharePoint is a list. That can be confusing at first, but for now, you just need to know that a document library is just a special kind of list. Although most other SharePoint lists are organized around things that are defined primarily by their metadata, document libraries are organized around files that exist separately and are described by their metadata.

    remember.eps A document library doesn’t just have to contain Microsoft Word files. Document libraries can contain many file types, including Excel, PDF, and Visio files. Even web pages are stored in document libraries.

    Getting Your Documents into a Library

    SharePoint 2010 gives you many ways to get your files into document libraries. In this section, I show you how to upload your documents one at a time or a whole bunch at once with the browser, with the familiar Windows Explorer interface, and with Office applications. With all these options, you have no excuse to keep your files on your hard drive!

    Uploading a single document

    When you have a single document to upload to a document library, you can do so easily through the browser. The process for uploading a document to a library is the same for any kind of library you use, whether it’s the Shared Documents library that’s created with your team site or another library created by the site owner.

    I walk you through the process of uploading a single document to a library in Chapter 1. The steps are similar to uploading multiple documents, which I discuss in the following section.

    SharePoint 2010 has a new feature called content organizer that can automatically route documents based on their properties. See Chapter 27 for details.

    tip.eps You can also send documents to a document library via e-mail. If your SharePoint farm administrator has configured SharePoint 2010 to accept incoming e-mail, individual document libraries can be given their own e-mail address. When someone sends a document as an attachment to that e-mail address, it’s uploaded to the document library. Unfortunately, sending documents via e-mail is not supported by Office 365 yet. This approach works well when you need to allow people outside your organization to place documents in a document library. I recommend using one document library to accept incoming documents and then assign someone in your team to move the documents to another document library.

    Uploading multiple documents

    There may be times when you have multiple documents to upload. SharePoint 2010 allows you to select multiple documents and upload them all at once. This approach saves you time; however, you can’t batch-upload for properties. So even though you save time uploading the files, you still have to manually edit the properties on each file.

    warning_bomb.eps These steps work only in Internet Explorer.

    To upload multiple documents to the same document library:

    1. Browse to the document library where you want to upload your files.

    For example, click the Shared Documents link in the left navigation pane to go to that document library.

    2. Click the down arrow on the Upload Document button on the Documents tab of the Ribbon and choose Upload Multiple Documents.

    The Upload Multiple Documents window appears, as shown in Figure 2-1.

    Figure 2-1: You can upload multiple documents to a single document library.

    9781118273814-fg0201.tif

    3. Drag and drop files and folders from your file system into the Upload Multiple Documents window.

    Alternatively, click Browse for Files Instead to browse for the files you want to upload.

    The files appear in the SharePoint Upload Document window, as shown in Figure 2-2.

    Figure 2-2: Drag and drop the files you want to upload.

    9781118273814-fg0202.tif

    4. Click OK to upload the files to the document library.

    The Upload Document window presents an upload progress bar while the files upload and then a message indicating your files were uploaded.

    5. Click Done to return to the document library.

    An icon with the word New appears in the document library next to the name of each of the files you just uploaded. By default, this icon appears on all newly uploaded files for a period of three days.

    tip.eps Your SharePoint farm administrator can block certain file types, such as executable files. You can upload files from productivity suites, such as Microsoft Office and Open Office.

    You may have noticed that SharePoint didn’t prompt you to enter the properties for the files that you uploaded. When you perform a multiple upload, you aren’t prompted the way you are for a single upload, even for properties that are required (so you have to go back and add those properties later). So uploading multiple files isn’t a good approach when you need to capture properties.

    If you must manually update the properties for many files at once, you can use the Datasheet view of the library. The Datasheet view works similarly to a spreadsheet. To manually update properties using the Datasheet view in the same document library where you uploaded your files:

    1. Click the Library tab on the SharePoint Ribbon and then click the Datasheet View button.

    You must have a 32-bit version of Office installed on your computer for the Datasheet view to work, or you can install the 2007 Office System Driver: Data Connectivity Components if you’re using the 64-bit version of Office 2010.

    2. Place your cursor in the field you want to update and make changes, as shown in Figure 2-3.

    3. Move your cursor off the row you updated and then SharePoint 2010 saves your updates.

    See Chapter 4 for more details on working with Datasheet views. Note that not all column types can be updated using Datasheet views. For example, the ever-popular managed metadata column that was introduced in SharePoint 2010 doesn’t play nice with Datasheet views. If you need to do a lot of bulk uploading, I suggest looking for a third-party tool to help manage the bulk editing of metadata.

    Figure 2-3: Use Datasheet view to update document properties.

    9781118273814-fg0203.tif

    Uploading documents with Windows Explorer

    You can also use the familiar Windows Explorer to copy and paste documents into a document library. To access the Windows Explorer folder of a document library:

    1. Browse to the document library using Internet Explorer.

    2. Click the Library tab on the SharePoint Ribbon and then click the Open with Explorer button in the Connect & Export group.

    You may be prompted for your username and password. If so, enter your credentials and click OK. The library opens in a Windows Explorer folder view, as shown in Figure 2-4.

    3. Copy and paste your documents into the folder and then refresh your browser window to see your documents.

    This process doesn’t prompt you to enter properties or bulk check-in your documents.

    If you’re using a browser other than Internet Explorer, you can still access your libraries using Windows Explorer. In Windows Vista, add the web address of your SharePoint 2010 team site or document library as a new network location in the Computer folder. For Windows XP users, add a new network place to access your library using Windows Explorer. Mac users can use the Microsoft Document Connection, which can be installed with Office 2008 for Mac Service Pack 2.

    Figure 2-4: Copy and paste your documents with Windows Explorer.

    9781118273814-fg0204.eps

    Moving documents in and around SharePoint

    Just because you uploaded your document into one document library doesn’t mean it’s stuck there forever. Sometimes you want to move documents to a different document library. You can use the Windows Explorer view to quickly move documents from one document library into another. But unfortunately, Windows Explorer moves the files only, and not any associated metadata. So for that reason, investigate the copy and move function of the Manage Content and Structure tool on the Site Actions menu. (I discuss this tool in Chapter 19.)

    Windows Explorer is great if you need to upload a lot of documents into a document library. But resist the urge to take all the files from your shared drives and to copy them into libraries with Windows Explorer. That’s usually a recipe for disaster because most people store files in folders and recreating that folder structure in a SharePoint library makes it very hard to find files. (Although folders have some uses in SharePoint, navigation isn’t one of them.) Instead, consider the other options — libraries, tagging, and content types — when moving files into SharePoint.

    technicalstuff.eps SharePoint 2010 uses a number of protocols to allow you to access libraries as folders with Windows Explorer. In my experience, this feature either works or it doesn’t. If it doesn’t, most organizations aren’t willing to spend any energy to figure out why.

    Uploading documents into a folder

    You can use folders within your document libraries as a means to organize your documents. I show you how to create a folder and upload files into it, but I urge you to first read the sidebar, Why folders in SharePoint are evil.

    Okay, so maybe you have a document library and you have a subset of files that only supervisors should see. You could put those files in a separate document library and set the permissions on that

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