To use it, first open up a tab (it also works with the bot signin action) so you have something to inspect with the DevTools. (If you don’t see “Developer Preview” on the About menu, it’s because you must have Allow sideloading of external apps enabled for the Office 365 tenant you are using, as described here.) Teams will restart in Developer Preview mode, and there will be a new command available. The feature is only available in the Developer Preview version of Microsoft Teams, which you access by clicking on your profile picture, then clicking on About > Developer Preview. There’s been an undocumented way to get to them since the earliest versions of the desktop client, but we’ve never exposed an official way…until today. Sometimes the only way to figure out what’s going on is to use the DevTools. While apps running in the web version of Teams and the desktop version of teams are almost exactly the same, there are some differences, particularly with respect to authentication. Many developers have asked us, “how can I get to the browser DevTools for my Microsoft Teams app when it’s running in the desktop client?” After all, when Teams is running in a browser, it’s easy: F12 (on Windows) or Command-Option-I (on MacOS).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |