Combobox"

From Documentation
Line 193: Line 193:
 
</source>
 
</source>
  
Notice that, when the <tt>onChanging</tt> event is received, the content of the combobox has not changed. Therefore, you cannot use the <tt>value</tt> property of the combobox. Instead, you should use the <tt>value</tt> property of the event (<tt>org.zkoss.zk.ui.event.InputEvent</tt>).
+
Notice that, when the <tt>onChanging</tt> event is received, the content of the combobox has not changed. Therefore, you cannot use the <tt>value</tt> property of the combobox. Instead, you should use the <tt>value</tt> property of the <javadoc>org.zkoss.zk.ui.event.InputEvent</javadoc>.
  
 +
<blockquote>
 +
----
 +
<references/>
 +
</blockquote>
 
=Inherited Functions=
 
=Inherited Functions=
  

Revision as of 04:26, 29 November 2010

Combobox

Employment/Purpose

Components: combobox and comboitem.

A combobox is a special text box that embeds a drop-down list. With comboboxes, users are allowed to select from a drop-down list, in addition to entering the text manually.

Example

ZKComRef Combobox Example.PNG

 <combobox>
     <comboitem label="Simple and Rich"/>
     <comboitem label="Cool!"/>
     <comboitem label="Ajax and RIA"/>
 </combobox>

Combobox onAfterRender.png

<zk>
	<zscript><![CDATA[
		ListModelList lm = new ListModelList(Arrays.asList(new String[] { "David",
				"Thomas", "Steven" }));
	]]></zscript>
	
	<combobox model="${lm}" onAfterRender="self.setSelectedIndex(2)"/>
</zk>

Mouseless Entry Combobox

  • Alt+DOWN to pop up the list.
  • Alt+UP or ESC to close the list.
  • UP and DOWN to change the selection of the items from the list.

properties

Autocomplete

Autocomplete in a Brute-force Way

The straightforward way to implement the autocomplete feature is to listen the onChanging event. For example,

<combobox>
  <attribute name="onChaging"><![CDATA[
  self.getChildren().clear(); //remove all children
  for (String value: getMatched(event.getValue())
    self.appendChild(new Comboitem(value));
  ]]></attribute>
</combobox>

where we assume getMatched() is an application-specific method that returns a collection of matched values.

Autocomplete by ListSubModel

To separate the data from the view (combobox) better, we could implement a list model with ListSubModel. ZK provides a set of utilities in ListModels to convert an instance of ListModel to another instance that proxies the original list model and implements ListSubModel. For example,

<combobox id="combo" apply="MyAutoComplete">

then in MyAutoComplete.java, you could have

public class MyAutoComplete extends GenericForwardComposer {
    Combobox combo;
    public void afterCompose() {
        super.afterCompose();
        combo.setModel(ListModels.toListSubModel(new ListModelList(getAllItems())));
    }
    List getAllItems() {
        //return all items
    }
}

By default, it shows the first 15 items that matches the value entered by the user. If you want to have a different value or a different comparator to find out matched items, you could invoke ListModels.toListSubModel(ListModel, Comparator, int) instead.


Note: Passing an instance of ListModelList directly to a combobox will show up all items in the list model, since it doesn't implement ListSubModel.

Note: Unlike ListModelList and others, SimpleListModel implements ListSubModel by default. You can use SimpleListModel directly but it handles only an array of data.

Autodrop

By default, the drop-down list won't be opened until user clicks the button, or presses Alt+DOWN. However, you could set the autodrop property to true, meaning as soon as the user types a character the drop-down list will be opened. This is helpful for novice users, but it might be annoying for experienced users.

If you prefer the combobox to drop down the list when the user types a character, you could specify the autodrop attribute as follows.

<combobox autodrop="true"/>

If you prefer to drop down the list when gaining the focus, you could provide a client-side listener as follows.

<combobox w:onfocus="this.open()" xmlns:w="client"/>

Description

You are able add a description to each combo item to make it more descriptive or assign an image to every item.

<zk>
	<combobox>
	    <comboitem label="Simple and Rich" image="/img/coffee.gif"
	     description="The simplest way to make Web applications rich"/>
	    <comboitem label="Cool!" image="/img/corner.gif"
	     description="The coolest technology"/>
	    <comboitem label="Ajax and RIA" image="/img/cubfirs.gif"
	     description="Rich Internet Application by Ajax"/>
	</combobox>
</zk>

FormAndInput 9.png

Akin to other components that support images, you are able to use the setImageContent method to assign a dynamically generated image to the comboitem component. Please refer to the Image section for details.

The onOpen Event

The onOpen event is sent to the application when a user opens the drop-down list. To defer the creation of combo items, you can use the fulfill attribute as shown below.

FormAndInput 10.png

<zk>
	<combobox fulfill="onOpen">
	    <comboitem label="Simple and Rich"/>
	    <comboitem label="Cool!"/>
	    <comboitem label="Ajax and RIA"/>
	</combobox>	
</zk>

Alternatively, you can listen to the onOpen event and prepare the drop-down list or change it dynamically as demonstrated below.

<zk>
	<zscript>
		void prepare() 
		{
			if (combo.getItemCount() == 0) 
			{
				combo.appendItem("Simple and Rich");
				combo.appendItem("Cool!");
				combo.appendItem("Ajax and RIA");
			}
		}
	</zscript>
	<combobox id="combo" onOpen="prepare()" />		
</zk>

The appendItem method is equivalent to creating a combo item and then setting the combobox as its parent.

The onChanging Event

Since a combobox is also a text box, you are also able to listen to an onChanging event. By listening to this event, you can manipulate the drop-down list as demonstrated by Google Suggests[1]. This feature is sometimes called auto-complete.

As illustrated below, you can populate the drop-down list based on what user is entering.

<zk>
	<zscript>
	     void suggest() 
	     {
	         combo.getItems().clear();
	         if (event.value.startsWith("A")) {
	             combo.appendItem("Ace");
	             combo.appendItem("Ajax");
	             combo.appendItem("Apple");
	         } else if (event.value.startsWith("B")) {
	             combo.appendItem("Best");
	             combo.appendItem("Blog");
	         }
	     }
	</zscript>
	
	<combobox id="combo" autodrop="true" onChanging="suggest()"/>
</zk>

Notice that, when the onChanging event is received, the content of the combobox has not changed. Therefore, you cannot use the value property of the combobox. Instead, you should use the value property of the InputEvent.


Inherited Functions

Please refer to Textbox for inherited functions.

Supported Events

Name
Event Type
onSelect
Event: SelectEvent

Represents an event caused by user's the list selection is changed at the client.

onOpen
Event: OpenEvent

Denotes user has opened or closed a component. Note: unlike onClose, this event is only a notification. The client sends this event after opening or closing the component.

It is useful to implement load-on-demand by listening to the onOpen event, and creating components when the first time the component is opened.

onAfterRender
Event: Event

Notifies one that the model's data has been rendered.

Supported Molds

Available molds of a component are defined in lang.xml embedded in zul.jar.

Name
Snapshot
default
Combobox mold default.png
rounded
Combobox mold rounded.png
[Since 5.0.0]

Supported Children

*  Comboitem

Use Cases

Version Description Example Location
     

Version History

Last Update : 2010/11/29


Version Date Content
5.0.4 August 2010 ListModels was introduced to simply the implementation of autocomplete.
5.0.4 July 2010 Combobox supported Selectable if it is also implemented with the specified ListModel.
5.0.4 July 2010 Supported onAfterRender event



Last Update : 2010/11/29

Copyright © Potix Corporation. This article is licensed under GNU Free Documentation License.