This is my scenario:
many usercontrols, each of them contains many gridviews.
I want to (re)load a single gridview via an ajax call to get rid of postbacks and to improve performances and user experience.
I don't want to rewrite tons of code so I just want to render that single gridview of that single control. <br/>
It means that if the gridview shows 4 fields and it has a bound server method it must be executed picking the rules from the .ascx.cs and the .ascx.
I cannot create a new instance of a gridview cause i need it to get created based on the .ascx rules.
I used this piece of code to create the grid and put it into the textwriter.
System.Web.UI.WebControls.GridView grid = new System.Web.UI.WebControls.GridView();
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
using (StringWriter sw = new StringWriter(sb))
{
using (HtmlTextWriter textWriter = new HtmlTextWriter(sw))
{
grid.DataSource = ds;
grid.DataBind();
grid.RenderControl(textWriter);
}
}
And it comes out like a normal grid as expected. But I don't need this; I need to generate a grid that is exactly the same as the one defined in the .ascx.
You should use an <asp:UpdatePanel>.
Related
I can't figure out how to programatically add a view into a layout or page.
I need to add views at runtime without using static xml declaration since i need to fetch them from an http requested object... . I didn't find useful informations in the docs.
Anyone knows how to do?
I think you meant to dynamically add some view / controls to the page rather than to navigate into another page.
If so, you just need to add some controls into one of the layouts in your page (only containers [=layouts] can have multiple children.
so, your code (viewmodel/page controller) would look something like:
var layout = page.getViewById("Mycontainer");
// create dynamic content
var label = new Label();
label.text = "dynamic";
// connect to live view
layout.addChild(label)
In addition to having a page included inside your app (normal); you download the xml, css, & js to another directory and then navigate to it by then doing something like page.navigate('downloaded/page-name');
you can also do
var factoryFunc = function () {
var label = new labelModule.Label();
label.text = "Hello, world!";
var page = new pagesModule.Page();
page.content = label;
return page;
};
topmost.navigate(factoryFunc);
https://docs.nativescript.org/navigation#navigate-with-factory-function
You should check out this thread on the {N} forum.
The question is about dynamically loading a page and module from a remote server. The (possible) solution is given in this thread.
There is a known issue with the Telerik RadEditor that causes odd character insertions, as documented here.
The work around requires the insertion of a client-side script to strip out the offending character in the OnClientSubmit event.
We use this control in many places and have three styles defined in our skins file for it. We also derive a custom control from the RadEditor in a custom control we call RichEdit.
The question is - will this approach work to guarantee that all instances of our RichEdit control receive the required client-side event?
1) In the RichEdit.cs OnLoad, register a client script block containing the required javascript function
2) In the skin file, add the required OnClientSubmit method call to each skin?
So - will it work? And if not, what DO I need to do?
And the answer is yes.
Adding a call to this method in the page load section:
private void AddRichEditGarbageCharacterWorkaround()
{
string scriptName = "RadEditorOnClientSubmit";
Type csType = GetType();
ClientScriptManager csm = Page.ClientScript;
if (!csm.IsClientScriptBlockRegistered(csType, scriptName))
{
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
sb.Append("<script type=\"text/javascript\">");
sb.Append("\tfunction RadEditorStripGarbage(editor, args) {");
sb.Append("\t\tvar html = editor.get_html();");
sb.Append("\t\thtml = html.replace(/\u200b/g, \"\");");
sb.Append("\t\teditor.set_html(html);");
sb.Append("\t\t}");
sb.Append("</script>");
csm.RegisterClientScriptBlock(csType, scriptName, sb.ToString());
}
}
And adding this to the skin:
<nt:RichEdit runat="server" SkinID="SpellCheckOnly" ...
OnClientSubmit="RadEditorStripGarbage" >
Successfully added the code and the hook to every instance.
how can add new control from controller
// create a simple Input field
var oInput1 = new sap.m.Text('input1');
oInput1.setText("Some Text ");
oInput1.setTooltip("This is a tooltip ");
// attach it to some element in the page
oInput1.placeAt("sample1");
in view I add holder
try to add text from controller but it not display on screen.
var oLayout = this.getView().byId("idholder");
oLayout.addContent(oInput1);
is Run-time add new control is not possible. we have always render control in view and then update it is this good practice we have to follow ?
The placeAt() method is normally only used to place a View or App into the HTML.
If you want to add a UI5 control on your view, you can do it this way from the controller:
this.getView().addContent(oInput1);
But most likely you won't add controls directly to the view, but rather inside a layout or something inside your view. In that case, do it like this:
var oLayout = this.getView().byId("idOfYourSpecificLayoutFrame");
oLayout.addContent(oInput1);
I'm working on a Kendo Mobile project with a number of:
Kendo Views (external to root html)
Modal Views (in the root html).
The external files load on demand and everything works fine. But i'd like to have the same load on demand behavior for some of the modal views, because the root/based html file is becoming too large and not manageable.
Is there a way to either:
Store a modal view in an external file? If so is it possible to load via javascript syntax (app.navigate()) rather than the declarative syntax (href='externalmodal').
Manually pre-load an external view without navigating to it first.
This code lets you manually create a view:
var viewUrl = 'blahblahblah';
var element = $.parseHTML('<div data-role=view>test</div>')[0];
element.style.display = 'none';
$(document.body).append(element);
var options = $.extend({}, kendo.parseOptions(element, kendo.mobile.ui.View.fn.options));
var view = new kendo.mobile.ui.View(element, options);
view.element[0].setAttribute('data-url', viewUrl);
kendo.mobile.application.navigate(viewUrl, '');
Depending on what features you use, you may need to instead use code similar that that used for ModalView below so that Kendo creates the subclass (changes: substitute View for ModalView, substitute view for modalview, add data-url, remove call to show(), maybe check that view not already created by checking for element with matching data-url). We haven't tested setting roles.view this way, but we did something similar while testing this stuff out and it worked.
Don't try settings the options - Kendo got confused (at least trying to set useNativeScrolling didn't work, also don't try setting the options object on the subclass unless you really know what you are doing).
Caveat: This was using browserHistory:false (which disables routing) when the kendo.mobile.Application was created. The technique should still work when using browser history if you use a valid url fragment (same as would be created by Kendo for the pushstate/hashchange url).
This is a also way to cleanly subclass kendo.mobile.ui.View that works well - although you must still use data-role=view even though your subclass is a "different" component. Note that you can't just use you cant use your own subclassed component with its own name like role=myview to subclass a view because there are hard-coded checks specifically for data-role=view in the kendo codebase. Same if you wish to subclass: layout modalview drawer splitview page (amongst other hard-coded kendo ui component names - search kendo code for kendo.roleSelector - ugly). e.g.
MyView = kendo.mobile.ui.View.extend({
init: function(element, options) {
kendo.mobile.ui.View.prototype.init.apply(this, arguments);
...
var myView = new MyView('<div data-role=view>test</div>');
Why it works: The relevant function in the Kendo source code is _findViewElement which does element = this.container.children("[" + attr("url") + "='" + urlPath + "']"); to see if the view already exists for a url, before creating a new one. A unique init function is always required as it ends up being the constructor function.
If you want to subclass a modalview, you need to do something different due to the way kendo works:
var MyModalView = kendo.mobile.ui.ModalView.extend({
html: '<div data-role=modalview style="width:90%;display:none;">Foobar</div>',
init: function() {
kendo.mobile.ui.ModalView.prototype.init.apply(this, arguments);
}
});
function makeModalView() {
$(document.body).append($.parseHTML(MyModalView.prototype.html));
var roles = $.extend({}, kendo.mobile.ui.roles);
roles.modalview = MyModalView;
var modalView = kendo.initWidget($(element), {}, roles);
modalView.open();
return modalView;
}
I have a view where I create a new company.
The company has a number of trades, or which 1 is a primary trade.
So when I enter the trades for that company, I select a trade via autocomplete, and this trade is added to a grid of trades underneath the autocomplete textbox. The grid contains the tradeId as a hidden field, the trade, and a radio button to indicate whether the trade is a primary trade and a remove button.
This is part of a form that contains other company details such as address.
Now I am wondering if I can use knockout and (maybe) jsrender to populate the grid without posting to the server?
When I have filled in the grid AND the other company details, I then want to submit the data to the controller post method.
Normally I use the Html helpers to post values to the controller, but I don't see how I can do that using knockout.
Yes you can use Knockout for this. If you have not checked the tutorials out yet then try this Knockout List and Collections tutorial. This should point you in the right direction. What you'll need to do is create a Trade object with observable properties and in a separate knockout view model create an observableArray to store trade objects. For information on posting to the server there are other tutorials in the same location.
function Trade(item) {
var self = this;
self.tradeId = ko.observable(item.tradeId);
self.tradeName = ko.observable(item.tradeName);
self.isPrimary = ko.observable(item.isPrimary);
}
function TradesViewModel() {
var self = this;
// Editable data
self.trades = ko.observableArray([]);
self.removeTrade = function(trade) { self.trades.remove(trades) }
self.save = function() {
$.post("/controller/action", self.trades);
}
}
ko.applyBindings(new TradesViewModel());