We'd like to open an empty Word/Excel/PowerPoint doucment form a "Promoted Link" in SharePoint 2013.What would the URL be?
NB! Both SharePoint 2013 and Office Web Apps are "on-premisis"
-T-
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We'd like to open an empty Word/Excel/PowerPoint doucment form a "Promoted Link" in SharePoint 2013.What would the URL be?
NB! Both SharePoint 2013 and Office Web Apps are "on-premisis"
-T-
Hi,
This is a quick note to let you know that I am trying to involve someone familiar with this topic to further look at this issue.
Thanks! Still need this .... got some additional info:
(Design seems to be the name of the list....) but still can't get this to work, probably problems related referencing the template..
You can start with the SharePoint page in your browser and upload a document from your computer, or you can start with Microsoft Office 2010. If you dont have an Office desktop application, you can use your browser to create a new document in the SharePoint library.
The steps for saving a document in a SharePoint library depend on the Office program you are using.
Note If you are saving the document to a SharePoint location you have already used, double-click its name.
If the Office desktop applications are not installed on your computer, you can use Office Web Apps to create documents. This feature can be configured by the administrator of the document library on your SharePoint site.
To open a document in Office Web Apps, go to the document library on your SharePoint site, and then click the link associated with the document. The document opens in the appropriate Web App.
If SharePoint asks you to choose between Read Only and Edit, then the library has not been configured to run Office Web Apps by clicking the document link. Instead, do this:
Hover over the document name until a drop-down arrow appears, and then click the arrow.
In the menu that appears, click View in Browser to read the document, or click Edit in Browser to edit the document.
For more information about using each of the Web Apps in SharePoint, see the following:
If coworkers store documents in your organizations SharePoint library, you can use Word Web App to view them, without having to start Word. Find text youre interested in. You can even copy and paste from the document.
Go to a document library on your SharePoint site, and then click the link associated with the Word document.
The document opens in Reading view.
The report is almost done; its saved in your teams SharePoint library. You want to finish it up before going home, so you quickly open it in the browser and type the last two paragraphs.
If you want to make changes to the document beyond what you can do in the browser, do this:
The document you print from the browser looks the same as it would if you printed it from Word.
With the document open in Word Web App in Reading view, click the File tab, and then click Print.
While viewing a spreadsheet, you interact with live data. Sort and filter columns or expand PivotTables to see relationships and trends. Recalculate values and refresh the data.
Go to a document library on your SharePoint site, and then click the link associated with the Excel workbook.
Excel Web App opens the workbook in a mode where you can view, sort, filter, recalculate and refresh data.
When you edit in the browser, you can change data, enter or edit formulas, create tables and charts, and apply basic formatting within the spreadsheet.
If you want to make changes to the workbook beyond what you can do in the browser, do this:
Got a signup sheet or group project? You can collaborate with other people on the same workbook at the same time. No more e-mailing a list around, or waiting for your teammate to check it back in on the SharePoint site.
With PowerPoint Web App, you can review your teams slides or step through a presentation in your web browser, without waiting for PowerPoint to open the presentation on your computer.
If your colleague wants you to add a few slides to the team presentation, you can quickly do that in your browser.
If you want to make changes to the presentation beyond what you can do in the browser, do this:
OneNote Web App gives you and your team a centralized place for collecting notes, brainstorming on a topic, or assembling the bits and pieces that will become a formal document.
In OneNote Web App, when you work in a notebook with others, you can work simultaneously. Similar to a wiki page, you can see who made which changes, and you can roll pages back to a previous version if someone makes changes you dont want.
I would also like to do this.
Currently I have a generic web part with
<a onclick="CoreInvoke('createNewDocumentWithRedirect2', event, 'https://DOMAIN.sharepoint.com/Dept/field/JSA_Library/Forms/JSA.dotm', 'https://DOMAIN.sharepoint.com/Dept/field/JSA_Library/', 'SharePoint.OpenDocuments', false, 'http://DOMAIN.sharepoint.com/_layouts/CreateNewDocument.aspx?id=http://DOMAIN.sharepoint.com/Dept/JSA_Library/Forms/JSA.dotm', true, 1); return false;" href="#" > <img src="https://DOMAIN.sharepoint.com/Dept/field/SiteAssets/JSA-icon-wide.png" alt="Create JSA"/></a>Is this possible from the simple url field in the promoted links?