Messagebox"
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! Version !! Date !! Content | ! Version !! Date !! Content | ||
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− | | | + | | 6.0.0 |
− | | | + | | October 2011 |
− | | | + | | The order and labels of the buttons were assignable. |
+ | |- | ||
+ | | 6.0.0 | ||
+ | | October 2011 | ||
+ | | <javadoc>org.zkoss.zul.Messagebox.ClickEvent</javadoc> was introduced to simplify the identification of a button. | ||
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{{ZKComponentReferencePageFooter}} | {{ZKComponentReferencePageFooter}} |
Revision as of 07:38, 13 October 2011
Messagebox
- Demonstration: Messagebox
- Java API: Messagebox
- JavaScript API: N/A
Employment/Purpose
It provides a set of utilities to show message boxes.
It is typically used to alert users when an error occurs, or to prompt users for an decision.
Note: it will show different behavior depending on whether you have EventThread enabled or not. (Refer to The_disable-event-thread_Element )
- When you enable event thread , it will work like a modal window .(It will pause current thread and waiting it to continue.)
- If you do customization on messagebox , you might need to know that the z-class on mesasge window would be different ,too.
Example
Event Thread Disabled
Here is an example used if the event thread is disabled (default case):
<window title="Messagebox demo" border="normal">
<button label="Question" width="100px">
<attribute name="onClick">
//in disable case .
Messagebox.show("Question is pressed. Are you sure?",
"Question", Messagebox.OK | Messagebox.CANCEL,
Messagebox.QUESTION,
new org.zkoss.zk.ui.event.EventListener(){
public void onEvent(Event e){
if(Messagebox.ON_OK.equals(e.getName())){
alert("user click ok ");
}else if(Messagebox.ON_CANCEL.equals(e.getName())){
alert("user click cancel ");
}
}
}
);
</attribute>
</button>
</window>
- Notice that, if you want to make it running under clustering environment, you should implement SerializableEventListener. For more information, please refer to ZK Developer's Reference: Clustering.
Event Thread Enabled
Here is an example used if the event thread is enabled.
<window title="Messagebox demo" border="normal">
<button label="Question" width="100px">
<attribute name="onClick">
//in enable case .
int responseCode = Messagebox.show("Question is pressed. Are you sure?",
"Question", Messagebox.OK | Messagebox.CANCEL,
Messagebox.QUESTION);
if(responseCode == Messagebox.OK){
alert("user click ok");
}else if(responseCode == Messagebox.CANCEL){
alert("user click cancel");
}
</attribute>
</button>
</window>
Customization
The Default Title
If the title is not specified in the application's name (returned by WebApp.getAppName()). You could change it by invoking WebApp.setAppName(String).
Since 5.0.6, you could specify the application's name with a library property called org.zkoss.zk.ui.WebApp.name. For example, you could specify the following in WEB-INF/zk.xml:
<library-property>
<name>org.zkoss.zk.ui.WebApp.name</name>
<value>My Killer Application</value>
</library-property>
The Template
The UI of a message box is based on a ZUL file, so you could customize it by replacing it with your own implementation. It can be done easily by invoking Messagebox.setTemplate(String). Notice that it affects all message boxes used in an application. It is typically called when the application starts (i.e., in WebAppInit.init(WebApp) -- for more information, please refer to ZK Developer's Reference: Init and Cleanup).
To implement a custom template, please take a look at the default template.
Supported events
None | None |
Supported Children
*NONE
Use cases
Version | Description | Example Location |
---|---|---|
Version History
Version | Date | Content |
---|---|---|
6.0.0 | October 2011 | The order and labels of the buttons were assignable. |
6.0.0 | October 2011 | Messagebox.ClickEvent was introduced to simplify the identification of a button. |