Microsoft+sharepoint+designer+2010+64bit+portable Today
For SPO or SharePoint 2016/2019, SPFx is the modern client-side development model. No more ASPX page editing.
This phrase represents three distinct desires: the stability of a 64-bit application, the convenience of a portable (no-install) app, and the specific feature set of SharePoint Designer 2010. But does this mythical software actually exist? And if not, what are your real-world alternatives?
: Third-party portable apps often crash when switching between "Code" and "Design" views or fail to interact correctly with the .NET Framework required for SharePoint connections. Official Download and Installation
One of SPD 2010’s principal strengths was its integration with SharePoint’s underlying architecture. It allowed users to create and edit master pages, page layouts, and ASPX pages that define site presentation. Designers could customize XSLT List Views (XLV) and Data View Web Parts (DVWP) to present list and library data in complex, tailored formats. The tool also facilitated connecting to external data sources via Business Data Catalog (BDC) and later Business Connectivity Services (BCS), enabling SharePoint pages to surface external database or web service information seamlessly. For organizations leveraging SharePoint as an intranet or collaboration hub, SPD 2010 offered powerful means to adapt sites to business needs without deploying farm solutions.
The only downside: you cannot use SPD 2013 to edit SharePoint 2010 sites without compatibility issues.
button, the red errors on the CEO's dashboard vanished. Leo pulled the thumbdrive, the "portable" ghost disappearing from the system without leaving a single trace in the "Add/Remove Programs" list. A Relic of a Different Era
While you might find third-party "portable" versions on file-sharing sites, these are not authorized by Microsoft. Using these can lead to:
For SPO or SharePoint 2016/2019, SPFx is the modern client-side development model. No more ASPX page editing.
This phrase represents three distinct desires: the stability of a 64-bit application, the convenience of a portable (no-install) app, and the specific feature set of SharePoint Designer 2010. But does this mythical software actually exist? And if not, what are your real-world alternatives?
: Third-party portable apps often crash when switching between "Code" and "Design" views or fail to interact correctly with the .NET Framework required for SharePoint connections. Official Download and Installation
One of SPD 2010’s principal strengths was its integration with SharePoint’s underlying architecture. It allowed users to create and edit master pages, page layouts, and ASPX pages that define site presentation. Designers could customize XSLT List Views (XLV) and Data View Web Parts (DVWP) to present list and library data in complex, tailored formats. The tool also facilitated connecting to external data sources via Business Data Catalog (BDC) and later Business Connectivity Services (BCS), enabling SharePoint pages to surface external database or web service information seamlessly. For organizations leveraging SharePoint as an intranet or collaboration hub, SPD 2010 offered powerful means to adapt sites to business needs without deploying farm solutions.
The only downside: you cannot use SPD 2013 to edit SharePoint 2010 sites without compatibility issues.
button, the red errors on the CEO's dashboard vanished. Leo pulled the thumbdrive, the "portable" ghost disappearing from the system without leaving a single trace in the "Add/Remove Programs" list. A Relic of a Different Era
While you might find third-party "portable" versions on file-sharing sites, these are not authorized by Microsoft. Using these can lead to: