This page is based on the PCF developer guide, change log, testing guide, and source folders you provided. It reflects the actual control estate: 2 Sales controls, 3 Field Service controls, and 4 Utilities controls, with the deployment distinction between bundle.js and editable source projects made clear.
The developer guide explains how the controls ship, how they are edited, and how they are deployed into Dynamics 365. This page should mirror that reality rather than generic PCF marketing copy.
The page now reflects the actual 9-control library documented in your files.
The guide distinguishes what Dynamics 365 executes directly and what is edited or rebuilt in source.
This remains the right place for the later phase: each control refined one by one from source and docs.
Full TypeScript source code with every purchase. Each control is independently deployable — publisher prefix dex, manifest, CSS, and README included. Sales, Field Service, and Utilities controls can be positioned as standalone add-ons or as part of a wider DEX Pro package.
For a Dynamics 365 buyer or technical evaluator, custom PCF controls immediately communicate platform depth. They show that the offer is not just configuration wrapped in marketing, but actual extension work built for real model-driven app constraints.
This page is designed to become the library hub. The summary cards prove breadth today. The next improvement is to enrich each control with problem solved, target entity or process, deployment notes, supported usage context, and clearer screenshots or demos.
For the relevant DEX Pro package: solution ZIPs, packaged components, documentation, and a structured delivery footprint that can be discussed before purchase.
Yes. The offers are built specifically for Microsoft Dynamics 365, Power Platform, and Dataverse environments rather than generic web app projects.
Yes. The current site can support control-led enquiries, solution-led enquiries, or broader architecture and implementation discussions.
No. Some buyers will only need a targeted UX improvement, a proof-of-concept, a training conversation, or a packaging discussion around one D365 problem area.
The site currently focuses on packaged controls, documented solutions, and real implementation assets. Case studies can be added later, but the current offer already shows concrete Dynamics 365 capability.
Yes. The main book and companion workbook create a credible route into onboarding, self-study, internal enablement, and future workshop-style offers.