Molds"
From Documentation
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All components support at least a mold called <tt>default</tt>, which is the default value. Some components might have support two or more molds. For example, tabbox supports both <tt>default</tt> and <tt>accordion</tt> molds. | All components support at least a mold called <tt>default</tt>, which is the default value. Some components might have support two or more molds. For example, tabbox supports both <tt>default</tt> and <tt>accordion</tt> molds. | ||
− | If <tt>tabbox</tt>'s <tt>mold</tt> is not set, it | + | If <tt>tabbox</tt>'s <tt>mold</tt> is not set, it uses the default mold. |
<source lang="xml" > | <source lang="xml" > | ||
<tabbox> | <tabbox> |
Revision as of 09:46, 25 July 2011
A component could have multiple different visual appearances. Each appearance is called a mold. A mold is basically a combination of a DOM structure plus CSS. That is, it is the visual representation of a component. Developers could dynamically change the mold by use of Component.setMold(String).
All components support at least a mold called default, which is the default value. Some components might have support two or more molds. For example, tabbox supports both default and accordion molds.
If tabbox's mold is not set, it uses the default mold.
<tabbox>
<tabs>
<tab label="First tab" />
<tab label="Second tab" />
</tabs>
<tabpanels>
<tabpanel>The first panel.</tabpanel>
<tabpanel>The second panel.</tabpanel>
</tabpanels>
</tabbox>
And you could set tabbox's mold to "accordion" to change the look.
<tabbox mold="accordion">
<tabs>
<tab label="First tab" />
<tab label="Second tab" />
</tabs>
<tabpanels>
<tabpanel>The first panel.</tabpanel>
<tabpanel>The second panel.</tabpanel>
</tabpanels>
</tabbox>
For more information about component's molds, please refer to ZK Component Reference.
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