In preparation for onboarding a user, once the user is created and appropriate license is applied, now we can update the user specific mailbox settings like the users time zone, locale info, working hours etc.
In Day 16 we extended the base .Net Core console application to create a user by calling Azure AD. Today we'll extend the base console application to assign a user license in Office 365.
In Day 15 we registered an Azure Active Directory (Azure AD) application and created a console application using .Net Core. The application uses a client secret and the Microsoft Authentication Library (MSAL) to establish an authentication context with the Microsoft Graph API. Today we'll extend that application to create a user within Azure AD.
MVP Article - Journey on how contributions for the community will result in different opportunities for anyone who is willing to share their knowledge.
In Day 14 we discussed batch processing requests to Microsoft Graph requests. Today we'll take a big jump and build our first project in .Net Core that can make calls against Microsoft Graph.
In Day 13 we discussed calling Microsoft Graph with Postman. Today we'll look at the concept of batching that can help optimize your application by combining multiple Microsoft Graph queries.
SharePoint Dev Ecosystem / SharePoint Patterns and Practices (PnP) November 2018 update is out with a summary of the latest guidance, samples, and solutions from SharePoint engineering or from the community for the community. This article is a summary of all the different areas and topics around SharePoint Dev ecosystem during the past month.
In Day 11 we discussed Access Tokens which are crucial to make Microsoft Graph requests. Today we'll look at the various authentication scenarios that are possible when querying with Microsoft Graph.