Does anyone know what the onLoad() or similar Event is in Flex? I'm trying initialize, but no joy.
protected function videoArea_initializeHandler(event:FlexEvent):void
{
var currentPosition:int = videoArea.verticalScrollPosition;
if (currentPosition < 0)
{
left_button.visible = false;
right_button.visible = true;
}
}
The best alternative for onLoad() in Flex would be creationComplete.
See this link (Adobe) and this link (MikaFlex) for more information about the event hierarchy.
What are you trying to initialize? If you're asking for the Flex Parallel to OnLoad(); perhaps you should tell us where onLoad() comes from?
I strongly suggest reading up on the Flex Component LifeCycle.
You can do initalization in the constructor of a component. If using MXML, you might want to use the preinitialize event. Some folks also use creationComplete.
Related
I met a case when I use mshtml to detect the event when click on a htmlelement like a href, I use the code below:
DOMEventHandler onclickhandler = new DOMEventHandler(doc,null);
onclickhandler.NewEventHandlers += new DOMEvent(DOMEventMethods._click);
doc.onclick = onclickhandler;
void _click(IHTMLEventObj obj)
{
MessageBox.Show(obj.srcElement.tagName);
}
But if the htmlelement has a JavaScript onclick={dosomething();return false;}
then I cannot capture the event.
How do I fix the issue like this? Or is there any work around?
Finally, I choose use mouseup to monitor this kind of event, not a great solution, if you have any other great solution, please let me know, thanks
I have a quite large Flex application with a large set of views and I ceratain views I'd like to add shortcuts.
And i'm looking for something like:
<mx:Vbox>
<foo:Shortcut keys="ctrl+s" action="{bar();}"/>
....
</mx:VBox>
Is there any framwork or component already done that does something like this? I guess it should be too difficult to build? When building this I only want the shortcuts to be active when the view is visible. How do I detect this? What base class is best to inherit from when working with non visual components?
I don't know of any framework component that does that already, but the examples above should get you started if you try to build your own.
There's no need to inherit from any component for a non-visual component like the one you've described here (your "foo" class needs no parents.) There's nothing in the Flex framework you need to inherit from for this.
However you architect it, your foo class is going to have to take in and parse keyboard codes to listen for and accept one or more methods to call. All you have to do is figure out when to add and remove the event listeners that will call the passed-in methods.
To handle turning your keyboard events on and off based on visibility, just have your foo component bind to the "visible" property of it's parent and add/remove event listeners accordingly.
You might also consider having the listeners added when the component that foo is nested in is on the display list rather than just visible. To do this, simply added and remove your event listeners in one of the component lifecycle methods - probably commitProperties is the most appropriate.
I don't think this solution answer your question directly but anyway, to help solve your problem here is an example.
For instance, I've extended the TextArea component like so. This is the best I can do so far, it can definitely be improved upon. Like, I don't know how to make the cursor go to the end after the next shortcut is pressed.
public class TextArea extends mx.controls.TextArea
{
// the keysmap is an example dictionary holding keycodes
private var keysmap:*={
112 = "some text for F1"
,113 = "the text for F2!"
//etc, etc
}
public var handleKeyDown:Boolean =false;
public function TextArea(){
if(handleKeyDown ==true){
this.addEventListener(KeyboardEvent.KEY_DOWN,this.keydownHandler);
}
}
public function keydownHandler(e:KeyboardEvent):void{
if(e.keyCode >= 112 && e.keyCode <= 123){
e.currentTarget["text"] += String(keysmap[e.keyCode]) +" ";
}//focusManager.setFocus(this);
}
}
I can't give you a solution using MXML, however my first thought would involve a singleton static class with a Dictionary that contains a list of objects as its keys and dynamically created dictionaries as the value pairing that contain keys denoting the desired key press with a function reference as the value.
So, say you had a Sprite and you wanted to capture ctrl+s for save when focus is on that object, I would get the instance of that Singleton, and call a function such as registerKeyBinding passing in the Sprite, the keyCode you want, and your pre-defined callback:
private var registeredObjects:Dictionary = new Dictionary(true);
public function registerKeyBinding(targetObject:Object, keyCode:int, callback:Function) {
if (registeredObjects[targetObject]) {
Dictionary(registeredObjects[targetObject])[keyCode] = callback;
}
else {
registeredObjects[targetObject] = new Dictionary();
Dictionary(registeredObjects[targetObject])[keyCode] = callback;
targetObject.addEventListener(KeyboardEvent.KEY_DOWN, keyDownListener);
}
}
private function keyDownListener(e:KeyboardEvent):void {
if (e.ctrlKey == true) {
//calls the function if that key exists.
Dictionary(registeredObjects[e.target])[e.keyCode];
}
}
Can't say I've tested this, but it was just the first thing that popped into my head. You could then setup functions to deregister and delete keys from the dictionaries, check states of the objects in addition to the keyCodes, remove old listeners, and delete entire dictionaries when there is no longer a need for them. Hopefully this is at least a tiny bit helpful.
I've done a lot of C# programming with both Winforms and WPF. I'm working on a Flex/Air app now for cross platform support. But this is my first flex project, so I'm learning as I go.
I've got a window that I want to popup, that the user will fill out a form, then hit OK or CANCEL. I set it up the same way I would've in C#, but it doesn't work, and I can't really see a way to make it do what I want.
EDIT:
So I'm trying events now, the events just don't seem to be handled...
EDIT again:
Oh, It's because the popup manager seems to create a new instance of the Form object, rather than using the one I created already.
so in the showWindow method, I put in this code rather than the popup manager:
parent.addChild(this);
then I remove it when I close it. The only problem is, it doesn't disable the rest of the parent like the popup manager does. Any suggestions on that?
PARENT:
private function btnAdd_Clicked():void
{
var form:Form = new Form();
form.addEventListener(CloseEvent.CLOSE, onFormClosed, false, 0, true);
recipeForm.showWindow(this);
}
private function onFormClosed(e:CloseEvent):void
{
//none of these Alerts are ever shown. I also tried breakpoints in debug to try an follow the code, with no luck
Alert.show("Closed");
if(e.detail == Alert.OK)
{
Alert.show("OK");
}
else if(e.detail == Alert.CANCEL)
{
Alert.show("Cancel");
}
}
CHILD:
private function btnCancel_Clicked():void
{
okClicked = false;
closeWindow();
}
public function closeWindow():void
{
var e:CloseEvent = new CloseEvent(CloseEvent.CLOSE);
e.detail = okClicked ? Alert.OK : Alert.CANCEL;
dispatchEvent(e);
PopUpManager.removePopUp(this);
}
public function showWindow(parent:WindowedApplication):void
{
var window:IFlexDisplayObject = PopUpManager.createPopUp(parent, RecipeForm, true);
PopUpManager.centerPopUp(window);
}
You can do this at least two different ways:
FIRST WAY: Using events
Let your Form class dispatch an event when either of the buttons is clicked. After Form is instantiated from the parent view, add an eventListener for the event(s) it's known to dispatch. When the Form dispatches the event, the eventListener will be invoked. You can even reuse Flex's CloseEvent and set the "detail" property to either Alert.OK or Alert.CANCEL before dispatching it.
In Form:
var e:CloseEvent = new CloseEvent(CloseEvent.CLOSE);
e.detail = okClicked ? Alert.OK : Alert.CANCEL;
dispatchEvent(e);
In parent:
var f:Form = new Form();
f.addEventListener(CloseEvent.CLOSE, onClose, false, 0, true);
...
private function onClose(e:CloseEvent):void
{
if (e.detail == Alert.OK)
// do something
else if (e.detail == Alert.CANCEL)
// do something else
}
SECOND WAY: Using callbacks
Add a public var of type "Function" to your Form class and supply a callback function from the parent. This does basically the same thing as #1 except with little less abstraction / indirection.
I would recommend #1 since the event model in Flex is pretty well-conceived and more flexible than the callback.
In Form:
var e:CloseEvent = new CloseEvent(CloseEvent.CLOSE);
e.detail = okClicked ? Alert.OK : Alert.CANCEL;
dispatchEvent(e);
In parent:
var f:Form = new Form();
f.addEventListener(CloseEvent.CLOSE, onClose, false, 0, true);
...
private function onClose(e:CloseEvent):void
{
if (e.detail == Alert.OK)
// do something
else if (e.detail == Alert.CANCEL)
// do something else
}
Not sure if this is still an open issue. I ran into this very same problem and I think I figured out what is wrong. At least I did for my problem.
I implemented things exactly as you did. I also have the close attribute set to closeWindow (I'm using a TitleWindow for my dialog).
So when the window is closed via the X at the top, it will call closeWindow, also if you click on the Cancel button, it will also call closeWindow.
The problem for me was that clicking cancel, dispatches a CloseEvent which seems to be caught by a Listener which calls closeWindow again (possibly via the close attribute which probably creates its own internal listener). I'm not sure if its an infinite loop but Flex does not like this.
My solution was to create two functions, one for the X close window to call and one for the Cancel button to dispatch a CloseEvent of its own. This seemed to work for me. Hope it helps you.
I am creating a canvas in actionscript like :
private var cvs_preview:Canvas = null;
private function show_preview():void
{
this.cvs_preview = new Canvas();
this.cvs_preview.id = "cvs_preview_1";
this.cvs_preview.setStyle('backgroundColor', 0x000000);
this.cvs_preview.setStyle('backgroundAlpha', 1);
this.cvs_preview.setStyle('borderColor', 0x417FDD);
this.cvs_preview.setStyle('cornerRadius', 10);
this.cvs_preview.setStyle('borderStyle', 'solid');
this.cvs_preview.setStyle('dropShadowEnabled', true);
var pt:Point = image.localToGlobal(new Point(image.x, image.y));
this.cvs_preview.x = pt.x - 50;
this.cvs_preview.y = pt.y - 50;
this.cvs_preview.height = 200;
this.cvs_preview.width = 250;
//this.cvs_preview.addEventListener(FlexEvent.CREATION_COMPLETE, get_focus_on_canvas);
//this.cvs_preview.focusManager.setFocus(
//this.cvs_preview.addEventListener(MouseEvent.CLICK, end_preview_on_focus_change);
this.cvs_preview.addEventListener(FocusEvent.MOUSE_FOCUS_CHANGE, end_preview_on_focus_change);
Application.application.addChild(this.cvs_preview); //add as top-most visible container
btn_mini_preview.enabled = false;
}
So on the focus change i want to run the "end_preview_on_focus_change()"
but this is not working.
As per my understanding, i think the canvas not getting any focus in the first place. I was trying to use focusManager.setFocus to do that after the canvas's creation complete. but even that is giving me an error.
the code i was trying on Creation.Complete is :
private function get_focus_on_canvas(e:FlexEvent)
{
focusManager.setFocus(e.target);
//Alert.show("testing img complete");
}
this is giving me an error "1118: Implicit coercion of a value with static type Object to a possibly unrelated type mx.managers:IFocusManagerComponent."
basically i just want to use the focus out event of the canvas.
Can someone help me with this...
I have been on this issue since a long time.
Regards
Zeeshan
The error is correct. You have an object of type Object which you are trying to use as an IFocusManagerComponent. This will not work. To accomplish that line of code, you need to do something like
focusManager.setFocus( IFocusManagerComponent( e.target ) );
This, of course, assumes that the target implements IFocusManagerComponent. It will give you an error otherwise (and likely will in this case because Canvas is not listed as an IFocusManagerComponent). The good news is that Canvas does have a drawFocus method which will accomplish the same thing.
As to your MOUSE_FOCUS_CHANGE event, that will only be fired if an object already HAS focus and then loses it. I think you are better off using FlexEvent.CREATION_COMPLETE. This will ensure that the component has registered itself with all of the appropriate classes in the Flex SDK so that the FocusManager can even be aware of the new object. Whatever you do, do not try to set focus on something which has not been added to the stage (ie: Event.ADDED has been called).
As another piece of advice -- Event.ADDED bubbles, make sure that event.currentTarget == event.target to make sure that you are listening to the correct object. Otherwise, you might be calling the same function multiple times erroneously.
Only a few classes implement IFocusManagerComponent as others mentioned and Canvas is not one of them. If you really must call FocusManager.setFocus() you will have to extend the canvas class to implement this interface and use that class instead. You don't have to write any methods to implement this interface, all methods have already been implemented by UIComponent itself
//FocusableCanvas.as (include appropriate package and import statements)
public class FocusableCanvas extends Canvas implements IFocusManagerComponent
{
public function FocusableCanvas()
{
super();
}
}
//Now use this class instead of Canvas
this.cvs_preview = new FocusableCanvas();
//setFocus in creation complete handler
FocusManager.setFocus(IFocusManagerComponent(e.target));
But if all you want to do is to set focus on the canvas upon it's creation, you can call canvas.setFocus() from the creationComplete handler instead.
private function get_focus_on_canvas(e:FlexEvent)
{
Canvas(e.currentTarget).setFocus();
trace("done");
}
I see two problems, and no perfect solutions. With any luck, this can help you out.
First of all, e.target returns an object typecast with type Object. This explains your implict coercion error, because Object does not implement IFocusManagerComponent.
Second, iFocusManagerComponent is only implemented by Accordion, AdvancedListBase, Button, ButtonBar, ChartBase, ComboBase, DateChooser, DateField, HTML, ListBase, MenuBar, NumericStepper, TabNavigator, TextArea, TextInput, UIMovieClip as per this entry in the Flex 3.4 AS3 Reference.
This leads me to believe that a Canvas element cannot take focus and has simply inherited access to the FocusManager through inheritance of UIComponent.
The only solutions I can see are to utilize something other than Canvas to handle your focus related concerns, or subclass Canvas and implement iFocusManagerComponent, though that looks fairly complex.
Edit
Apologies for missing drawFocus in the above solution.
Please try;
private function get_focus_on_canvas(e:FlexEvent)
{
this.cvs_preview.setFocus();
}
Is there a way for the Flex app to get any information about the HTML document via the ExternalInterface? Can Flex find out if a particular DIV exists, for example?
ExternalInterface is a Javascript interface with the containing page, so anything that is possible in javascript is possible through ExternalInterface, either directly or through functions on the hoast page.
AnnonymousFunctionCall from ExternalInterface
Is there a way for the Flex app to get any information about the HTML document via the ExternalInterface?
Check out JSInterface - JavaScript API for ActionScript 3. Two front page examples are called:
JavaScript'ing Inside Flash
ActionScript'ing Inside HTML
I use this library currently and it is extremely powerful. I asked him (Oleg Galaburda) once whether or not I should use this for simply being able to resize the swf. He said something like "if you only need to do a few in javascript, just stick with ExternalInterface. If you need access to the DOM in ActionScript, use this".
There are hundreds of examples in the svn repository. He's done an awesome job with this thing. It converts JavaScript Objects to ActionScript and back, so you can use full-on classes. It would take a ton of work to rebuild that so it's cross browser and everything. He's done that!
Everything in JSInterface is basically a dynamic class, so you can drill down the DOM easily. Here's some sample methods (in ActionScript):
protected function testCSS():void
{
var styleTag:JSHTMLElement = JSInterface.pushCSS('.text{font-weight:bold;color:#ff00ff;font-size:90;text-decoration:underline;}');
var font:JSHTMLElement = JSInterface.document.createElement('font');
font.innerHTML = 'Hello world!';
font.setAttribute('class', 'text');
font.className = 'text';
JSInterface.document.body.appendChild(font);
trace(styleTag);
}
protected function insertIFrame():void
{
var body:JSDynamic = JSInterface.document.getElementsByTagName('body')[0];
var frame:JSDynamic = JSInterface.document.createElement("iframe");
frame.width = 300;
frame.height = 300;
if (JSInterface.navigator.appName.indexOf('Microsoft')>=0)
{
frame.onreadystatechange = function():void
{
trace(frame.readyState);
};
}
else
{
frame.onload = function():void
{
trace('iFrame loaded');
};
}
frame.src = 'http://actualwave.com';
body.appendChild(frame);
}
The library internally uses ExternalInterface to handle everything. But to serialize/deserialize the DOM to/from ActionScript, that's a ton of work. This library should do the trick.
Hope this helps,
Lance
Responding to another question I explained how ExternalInterface actually works. What you can take from that is a simple "yes".
[edit] some sample code:
var jsFunc:String = 'function () { return document.getElementById("test") != null; }';
var divExists:Boolean = ExternalInterface.call(jsFunc);
should clarify things ...