 Hey, I'm Andrew Connell. This video is an overview of one of the chapters in my course, Mastering the SharePoint Framework, that's available for purchase on my site, voitanos.io. This overview video is going to give you an idea of everything that the chapter covers. You can learn more by checking out the description and the notes below the video. If you got any questions about this chapter or about the course in general, just make sure you drop a comment below the video and I'll be sure to get back to you. So with that, let me get out of the way. Enjoy the overview to this chapter. Hello and welcome back to my course on Mastering the SharePoint Framework. Now in this chapter, we're going to create our very first SharePoint Framework Web Part Project, and we're going to see it work. Now the goal of this is to get a quick win, not to spend a ton of time on theory explaining how everything works. Remember that first time you learned how to drive or write your first Hello World program? Well hopefully your teacher didn't explain what compilers were, how your code was being converted down to ones and zeros so the computer could understand it. Instead, they told you what to do, you did it, and you saw Hello World show up on that black screen. Now that's what we're going to do in this chapter. I've got plenty of other chapters throughout this course that are going to go much deeper and explain how everything works. So what we'll do is we're going to create a web part, we're going to get up and running in our developer environment, and then we're going to start making a couple changes to the web part and pick through some of the code so that you can understand what's going on. And then finally, we're going to package up our web part and we're going to deploy it so we can see the full process. Now this way, you'll see the full experience for creating, testing, and debugging, and then deploying a web part into production. Before we get rolling, I want to mention something about what you're going to see in this chapter. The SharePoint Framework is supported both in SharePoint Online as well as multiple SharePoint Server on-premises versions, going all the way back to SharePoint Server 2016. Now in the next chapter, I'm going to dig into the differences between the different environments. But in this lesson, I'm going to assume that you're using SharePoint Online and the latest version of the SharePoint Framework that's available to you. The version of the SharePoint Framework that I'm using in the recording might not be the latest version that's available. So check the lesson notes for any updates or comments that may affect this recording. And if Microsoft release is a new version that's dramatically different than what you see here, I'll update the lesson video. One more thing. Let me address one thing that before we get started with this chapter. The creation of a new SharePoint Framework project using the Yeoman Generator for SharePoint Framework has changed multiple times over the years since the SharePoint Framework was very first introduced. Some of the questions had no impact on the project, such as the name or the description of your component, while others do. Now in addition, the prompts that you'll see are going to depend on when you run the generator, what kind of a component you're creating, or if you're creating a solution for an on-premises version of SharePoint or if you're using SharePoint Online. But like I said in this lesson, I'm not going to go through all the aspects of creating a project. Instead, just like the last topic, I'm going to cover that in the next chapter on digging into the SharePoint Framework. Okay, with all that covered, let's go and get started with this chapter. So I'm going to see you in the next lesson.