Is it possible to hide my custom task pane when opening the file.
I tried to add the following command to the OnLoad event, but it looks like the View has not yet been created at this point:
thisXDocument.View.Window.TaskPanes[0].Visible = false;
Is there any other way to do it?
BTW- I am using the 2003 InfoPath API.
It looks like OnSwitchView is called just after the form is completly loaded. So the View object has been created and you can get access to the task pane. OnSwitchView is called whenever the view changes and we only want to hide the task pane on load, so my code looks like this:
private bool HideTaskPane = true;
...
[InfoPathEventHandler(EventType = InfoPathEventType.OnSwitchView)]
public void OnSwitchView(DocEvent e)
{
//We only want to perform this once, on startup.
if (HideTaskPane == true)
{
thisXDocument.View.Window.TaskPanes[0].Visible = false;
HideTaskPane = false;
}
}
Related
Here's my situation. I have a javafx pane which I don't want to recreate each time I show it, because I want to keep all filled by user fields in between switching between views.
For that purpose I did this:
#FXML
private void initialize() {
createOrderPane = FxmlUtils.fxmlLoader(CREATE_ORDER_FXML);
}
public void setCenter(String fxmlPath) {
if(CREATE_ORDER_FXML.equals(fxmlPath)) {
borderPane.setCenter(createOrderPane);
}
else {
borderPane.setCenter(FxmlUtils.fxmlLoader(fxmlPath));
}
}
so in case user wants to see CREATE_ORDER_FXML it doesn't reload it, but uses already existing instance.
The problem is that some parts of the view should be reinitalized. For example database might change and I want to refresh some comboboxes which reads value from DB. How to achieve that?
Is there some onShow property? Or maybe I am able to get to the controller of createOrderPane object?
I have implemented a custom clickable label class in Xamarin.Forms along with a custom renderer, that adds a RippleDrawable as the controls Foreground. I am creating the RippleDrawable with the following code:
public static Drawable CreateRippleDrawable(Context context)
{
var typedValue = new TypedValue();
context.Theme.ResolveAttribute(Resource.Attribute.SelectableItemBackground, typedValue, true);
var rippleDrawable = context.Resources.GetDrawable(typedValue.ResourceId, context.Theme);
return rippleDrawable;
}
In my custom renderer I assign the drawable
this.Control.Foreground = DrawableHelper.CreateRippleDrawable(this.Context);
and update the ripple when the user touches the control
private void LinkLabelRenderer_Touch(object sender, TouchEventArgs e)
{
if (e.Event.Action == MotionEventActions.Down)
{
this.Pressed = true;
}
if (e.Event.Action == MotionEventActions.Cancel)
{
this.Pressed = false;
}
if (e.Event.Action == MotionEventActions.Up)
{
this.Ripple.SetHotspot(e.Event.GetX(), e.Event.GetY());
this.Pressed = false;
// raise the event of the Xamarin.Forms control
}
}
Now, whenever I click the control, the ripple will be shown, which is the expected behavior, but if I touch (tap or long-press) the parents of the control (e.g. the StackLayout, Grid or whatever layout contains the label, including their parent Layout, Page or View) the ripple animation will be triggered. Anyway, the event handler LinkLabelRenderer_Touch in not called in this case, only when the actual control is touched.
I can work around this behavior by adding an empty GestureRecognizer to the respective parent(s), but I really dislike this solution, because this is but a hack. And to make things worse it is a hack I'll always have to remember whenever I use the control.
How can I prevent the RippleDrawable being shown when the parent is touched?
Turned out I got things fundamentally wrong. Subscribing the Touch event is not the way to go. I had to make the control clickable and subscribe the Click event
this.Control.Clickable = true;
this.Click += LinkLabelRenderer_OnClick;
There is no need to handle all that RippleTouch stuff the way I did (via the Touch event) but could let android handle things for me.
I am using windows form application to create gui. I have create a form with several button. The functionality of the first button called button1 is to read a video from hard disk and display it to a picturebox. The last line of button1 code is to enable another button:
button2->Enabled = true;
Button1 code is inside a backgroundworker. The result of this, it works fine, however it doesnt enable the button2. Is there issue using button properties inside backgroundworker?
You have to use BeginInvoke method and use Action delegate because backgroundworker DoWork doesn't modify UI.
private:
void DoWork(Object^ /*sender*/, EventArgs^ /*e*/ )
{
// some code
button2->BeginInvoke(gcnew Action(this, &MyForm::ModifyButton) );
}
void ModifyButton()
{
button2->Enabled = true;
}
I'm trying to use a flexlib schedule viewer in my application.
I want to have it so that when I click on a scheduled event, it calls a function in my main app (that will allow me to edit the event). But there doesn't seem to be any specific function for anything like this built into the class ie no event dispatched when I click on an event.
I can use the 'click' function to detect that the item has been clicked on.. and have tried something like this:
private function exerciseClickHandler(event:MouseEvent):void{
if (exerciseSeries.selectedItem != null){
//code
}
}
<code:ScheduleViewer id="exerciseSeries" click="exerciseClickHandler(event)" />
This method isn't very reliable because if it only works the first time.. once an item is selected, it stays selected so all following clicks on the item fulfills the condition.
Is there any way to determine whether an event was being clicked on?
Or do I have to extend the component and add some sort of clickEvent when an event is clicked on.
Since exerciseClickHandler is firing up when you click on the component, wouldn't this work?
Instead of
private function exerciseClickHandler(event:MouseEvent):void{
if (exerciseSeries.selectedItem != null){
//code
}
}
write
private function exerciseClickHandler(event:MouseEvent):void{
switch (exerciseSeries.selectedItem)
{
//code
case xy:
break;
}
}
or
private function exerciseClickHandler(event:MouseEvent):void{
//do something with exerciseSeries.selectedItem
}
What I mean is that you wrote that everything stops after the first element is clicked. And according to the code you provided it has to stop, beacuse after the first click exerciseSeries.selectedItem won't be null anymore, since it's selected. So remove the conditional you wrote and use the instance.
I'd suggest you set up a ChangeWatcher to keep an eye on the selectedItem (or selectedItems if you are going to allow multiple selection at some point). Example:
protected exerciseSeriesCreationCompleteHandler(event:FlexEvent):void{
ChangeWatcher.watch(this,['exerciseSeries','selectedItem'], handleChange_SelectedItem);
}
protected function handleChange_SelectedItem(event:PropertyChangeEvent):void{
// Either
dispatchedEvent(//some custom event);
// Or
someDirectMethodCall();
}
An alternative would be to search for an instance of the the event class in the view hierarchy under the mouse coordinates whenever a user clicks.
//Attach this click handler to the component
private function handleClick(event : MouseEvent) : void {
var obj : *EventClass*= null;
var applicationStage : Stage = FlexGlobals.topLevelApplication.stage as Stage;
var mousePoint : Point = new Point(applicationStage.mouseX, applicationStage.mouseY);
var objects : Array = applicationStage.getObjectsUnderPoint(mousePoint);
for (var i : int = objects.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
if (objects[i] is *EventClass*) {
obj = objects[i] as *EventClass*;
break;
}
}
if(obj is *EventClass*){
//Dispatch some custom event with obj being the item that was clicked on.
}
}
Where EventClass is the class of the objects that represent events
I have had similar problems and sometimes you can get by with wrapping the object with a Box and putting the click event on the Box. If you have not already tried that, it's a cheap, easy fix (if it works for you).
<mx:Box click="exerciseClickHandler(event)">
<code:ScheduleViewer id="exerciseSeries" />
</mx:Box>
I need to programmatically remove an alert.
This is why:
My application uses BrowserManager to enable deep linking based off of the content in the #hash part of the url. If an alert is currently up, and the user hits the back button, the application will revert back to its previous state. But the Alert will still be up, and in many cases irrelevant at that point.
So is there a way to programmatically remove the Alert? so when the hash fragment changes I can remove it.
Thanks!
It turns out the Alert.show function returns an Alert reference and then just uses PopUpManager to add it to the display list. so if you capture the return reference when you call Alert.show you can tell PopUpManager to remove it. :)
You can do this by keeping the Alert object as member data, and then setting its visible property to false when you're done with it. Next time you need to show an Alert, don't create a new one - grab the one you've already created and set its properties, then set visible to true again.
private var myAlert : Alert;
public void showAlert( message: String, title : String ) : void
{
hideAlert();
myAlert = Alert.show( message, title, Alert.OK | Alert.NONMODAL );
}
public void hideAlert() : void
{
if( myAlert != null && myAlert.visible ) {
myAlert.visible = false;
}
}
I don't think that is possible.
You can create your own alert component subclassing TitleWindow and then use PopupManager to show/hide them.