Hiding SharePoint List and Library Menus
For a recent project I needed to hide several menu items in the document library toolbar, and I wanted to do it as a Feature. The obvious choice from the SDK was HideCustomAction. But... it does not seem to work. A search of the web finds lots of discussion about HideCustomAction and how it only works on a few places, such as those listed in the MSDN article here. There is either not enough info in the table in that article, or that is the complete list of the only items that can be touched with HideCustomAction.
So what else can we do? Fall back to the old tricks, that's what! A little JavaScript routine can find and change what we need. For example, this will find and hide the Explorer View menu:
<script language="JavaScript">
var doc = document.getElementsByTagName('ie:menuitem');
for (var i = 0; i < doc.length; i++)
{
itm = doc[i];
if (itm.id.match('OpenInExplorer')!=null)
{ itm.hidden=true; }
}
</script>
The trick here is to find the menu tags on the page. What we are looking for is this:
<ie:menuitem id="zz23_OpenInExplorer" ... hidden= ... />
The JavaScript starts by finding all tags named "ie:menuitem" and then looping through those to find the one we need. The hidden attribute is pretty obvious, so we set it to false.
For just one library:
Where do you put this JavaScript? For just one library use SharePoint Designer add this to the bottom of the allitems.aspx for that library. The best place is just before the end tag (</asp:Content>) tag of the "<asp:Content ContentPlaceHolderId="PlaceHolderMain" runat="server">" tag.
For all libraries:
To impact all libraries with a single edit you will need to use SharePoint Designer to add this JavaScript at the end of the Master Page (default.master), just before the "</BODY>" tag.
What about a Feature?
If you want to control the hiding of the menus by using a Feature so you can turn them on and off at will, and at the farm, application, site collection or site level the you have a little more work to do, but not too much.
I will return here later and add a full step by step, but here's the code you will need:
- A SharePoint Delegate control:
Add this to the bottom of your Master Page just before the </body> tag (The ControlId is up to you, but needs to match the Id used in the elements file):
<SharePoint:DelegateControl runat="server" ControlId="MiscControls" AllowMultipleControls="true"/>
- A .Net User Control:
HideMenus.ascx
<%@ Control Language="C#" ClassName="HideMenus" %>
<script language="JavaScript">
var doc = document.getElementsByTagName('ie:menuitem');
for (var i = 0; i < doc.length; i++)
{
itm = doc[i];
if (itm.id.match('MultipleUpload')!=null | itm.id.match('OpenInExplorer')!=null)
{ itm.hidden=true; }
}
</script>
- A feature file:
Feature.xml
<Feature
Id="531F15CD-A646-45e5-AB61-4F8DF89C29D9"
Title="Hide Menus"
Description="Sample feature to hide selected menus (from TechTrainingNotes)"
Scope="Web"
Hidden="FALSE"
xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/sharepoint/">
<ElementManifests>
<ElementManifest Location="elements.xml" />
</ElementManifests>
</Feature>
- An elements file:
Elements.xml
<Elements xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/sharepoint/">
<Control
ControlSrc="~/_controltemplates/HideMenus.ascx"
Sequence="100"
Id="MiscControls">
</Control>
</Elements>
The is a list of items created by a typical WSS Master Page:
Menu item name |
Menu |
Menu text |
PersonalInformation |
The Welcome menu |
My Settings |
LoginAsDifferentUser |
The Welcome menu |
Sign in as Different User |
RequestAccess |
The Welcome menu |
Request Access |
Logout |
The Welcome menu |
Sign Out |
MenuItem_Create |
Site Actions |
Create |
MenuItem_Settings |
Site Actions Site Settings |
This is a list of items created by a typical document library allitems.aspx page:
(all of the above table plus the following)
New0 (zero, not O) |
New |
New Document (default click) |
NewFolder |
New |
New Folder |
Upload |
Upload |
Upload Document |
MultipleUpload |
Upload |
Upload Multiple Documents |
EditInGridButton |
Actions |
Edit in Datasheet |
OpenInExplorer |
Actions |
Open with Windows Explorer |
OfflineButton |
Actions |
Connect to Outlook |
ExportToSpreadsheet |
Actions |
Export to Spreadsheet |
ViewRSS |
Actions |
View RSS Feed |
SubscribeButton |
Actions |
Alert Me |
AddColumn |
Settings |
Create Column |
AddView |
Settings |
Create View |
ListSettings |
Settings |
Document Library Settings |
DefaultView |
View |
All Documents (in typical library) |
View1 |
View |
Explorer View |
ModifyView |
View |
Modify this view |
CreateView |
View |
Create view |
10 comments:
To support firefox...
var doc = document.getElementsByTagName('ie:menuitem');
for (var i = 0; i < doc.length; i++){
var itm = doc[i];
if (itm.id.match('OpenInExplorer')!=null){
var p = itm.parentNode;
p.removeChild(itm);
}
}
The FlydMaster
Nicely written, clearest example I've seen. Got it working in five minutes. I use IE Developer Toolbar to get the menu references.
Little stuck, how would you remove menu items from the individual item context menus, e.g. ID_EditProperties?
thanks
Spartacus55,
Hiding items in the ECB menu is a problem as this menu is not part of the CustomAction framework. ECBs are added using JavaScript found in /_layouts/1033/core.js
Here's the best bet I've found:
http://www.helloitsliam.com/archive/2007/08/10/moss2007-%E2%80%93-item-level-menus-investigation.aspx
Mike
Excellent Post. Saved lot of time. Thank You
One attribute missing is,
'ExportToDatabase' relating to 'Open With Access'
Is it possible to hide toolbar Action menu item called 'connect to outlook' and 'open in explorer'?
Anonymous,
See "OpenInExplorer" and "OfflineButton" in the table above.
Mike
Its working fine for sharepoint 2007.Will it work for sharepoint 2010 aswell?
Anonymous,
In general, yes it will work in 2010. Some of the IDs have been changed so you may need to add an "or" (||) to handle both names. See this article:
http://techtrainingnotes.blogspot.com/2011/04/sharepoint-2010-menu-ids.html
Mike
Didn't work for me for SharePoint 2013 using IE11. I had to overwrite the dom nodes outerHTML.
Example (not hiding the menu but giving it an other onclick action):
itm.outerHTML = itm.outerHTML.replace("onmenuclick", "onmenuclick=\"GoToPage('" + url + "');\" oldMenuClick");
Robert,
Thanks for the code. 2013 changed much of the HTML in SharePoint.
Mike
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