Property Binding"
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+ | | February 2012 | ||
+ | | The MVVM was introduced. | ||
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Revision as of 01:43, 9 February 2012
Two Way Data Binding
Property binding makes developers bind any component's attribute to ViewModel's property and specify its access privilege. There are 3 kinds of access privilege: save-load ( @bind ), save only ( @save ), load only( @load ).
We usually use save only binding on input components, e.g., textbox, to collect user input into a JavaBean and load only binding when displaying data. If you have both need, you can use save-load binding. We also call it Non-conditional Property Binding, because you cannot specify conditional in this binding.
Save-load binding
<window id="window" title="maximize test" border="normal"
maximizable="true" maximized="@bind(vm.maximized)">
</window>
- In 2 way (save-load) binding, when window's maximized attribute is changed, it will save value back to ViewModel's "maximized" property, and vice versa.
Save only binding
<textbox value="@save(vm.person.firstname)"/>
<textbox value="@save(vm.person.lastname)"/>
<intbox value="@save(vm.person.age)"/>
- In save-only binding, only textbox's value change will be saved to ViewModel. ViewModel's change won't be loaded to textbox.
Load only binding
<label value="@load(vm.welcomeMessage)" />
- In load-only binding, only ViewModel's property change will be load to label.
The timing of saving a component attribute's value to ViewModel is when the attribute related event fires. For example, textbox's value is saved at onChange event firing. After you finish your input in a textbox and move the cursor to next input field, the input data is saved to ViewModel at that time. The timing of loading is specified by @NotifyChange .
Conditional Binding
Sometimes we need to control the timing of saving or loading instead of depending upon the attribute related event firing. We can specify property before or after to control the timing upon ViewModel's Command. Therefore, only before or after executing specified Command, the attribute's value is saved (or loading) to a ViewModel.
Assume that there is an order management application with a database. The following zul example is one of its page, listbox displays order list and doublebox is for editing an order detail.
Save before a command
<listbox model="@load(vm.orders)" selectedItem="@bind(vm.selected)" hflex="true" height="200px">
<template name="model" var="item">
<listitem >
<listcell label="@load(item.id)"/>
<listcell label="@load(item.quantity)"/>
<listcell label="@load(item.price)" />
</listitem>
</template>
</listbox>
<toolbar>
<button label="New" onClick="@command('newOrder')" />
<button label="Save" onClick="@command('saveOrder')" disabled="@bind(empty vm.selected)" />
<!-- show confirm dialog when selected is persisted -->
<button label="Delete" onClick="@command(empty vm.selected.id?'deleteOrder':'confirmDelete')"
disabled="@load(empty vm.selected)" />
</toolbar>
<grid hflex="true" >
<columns>
<column width="120px"/>
<column/>
</columns>
<rows>
<row>Quantity
<intbox value="@load(vm.selected.quantity) @save(vm.selected.quantity,before='saveOrder') "/>
</row>
<row>Price
<doublebox value="@load(vm.selected.price) @save(vm.selected.price,before='saveOrder') "
format="###,##0.00"/>
</row>
</rows>
</grid>
- The listcell and doublebox are both bound to vm.selected.price . ( line 6,26)
- If doublebox's value is saved immediately after user input, listcell's label which is also bound to the same ViewModel's property will also change. This effect might mislead the user that the value has been saved to database.
- To eliminate this misleading effect, developer might hope to batch save all editing result after the user click a "Save" button. We can achieve this by specifying Command's name for property before in @save . The value of intbox and doublebox are batch-saved when the use clicks "Save" button. (line 23)
Execution Order
If a component has non-conditional property and command binding at the same time. The execution order is :
- Save binding
- Execute the command
- Load binding
A component with multiple binding
<textbox value="@bind(vm.filter)" onChange="@command('doSearch')"/>
- When onChange event fires, the binder saves vm.filter first, executes command "doSearch", then loads vm.filter.
Multiple Conditions
We also can specify multiple Command's name in an array of string literal for property before or after like following:
Load after multiple commands
<label value="@load(vm.person.firstname, after={'update','delete'})"/>
When we use property binding to collect user input, we might need to validate it before saving to a ViewModel. ZK provides a standard validation mechanism through a reusable element called validator. We'll describe its detail in section: ZK Developer's Reference/MVVM/DataBinding/Validator.
Collection Binding
We need collection binding when we bind a container component's "model" attribute of , e.g. listbox or grid, to a ViewModel. That target property of ViewModel must be an Collection object, e.g. List or Set . We usually use this binding with <template> and specify its "var" attribute to name the iteration variable which represents each object of the collection. ZK automatically set the name of the implicit iteration status variable upon the name of iteration variable and this variable stores the index of iteration. E.g. if you set var="item" , current iteration index is itemStatus.index . If you don't specify iteration variable name in var, their default variable name are each and eachStatus .
We'll use the following ViewModel to demonstrate usage of collection binding.
ViewModel for collection binding
public class OrderVM {
//the order list
private List<Order> orders;
//the selected order
private Order selected;
public List<Order> getOrders() {
return orders;
}
public Order getSelected() {
return selected;
}
public void setSelected(Order selected) {
this.selected = selected;
}
}
Binding on Listbox
Collection binding with listbox
<listbox model="@load(vm.orders)" selectedItem="@bind(vm.selected)" hflex="true" height="200px">
<listhead>
<listheader label="Row Index"/>
<listheader label="Id"/>
<listheader label="Quantity" align="center" width="80px" />
<listheader label="Price" align="center" width="80px" />
<listheader label="Creation Date" align="center" width="100px" />
<listheader label="Shipping Date" align="center" width="100px" />
</listhead>
<template name="model" var="item">
<listitem >
<listcell label="@load(itemStatus.index)"/>
<listcell label="@load(item.id)"/>
<listcell label="@load(item.quantity)" style="@load(item.quantity lt 3?'color:red':'')"/>
<listcell label="@load(item.price)"/>
<listcell label="@load(item.creationDate)"/>
<listcell label="@load(item.shippingDate)"/>
</listitem>
</template>
</listbox>
- We bind listbox's model to a Collection type property: List<Order> . (line 1)
- We bind "seletedItem" to a ViewModel's property of same object type ( Order ) in a collection. When each time a user select an item of the listbox, binder will save the selected object to ViewModel. Therefore, we can get user's selection by this way. (line 1)
- The value of "var" attribute: item represents an object of the model, so use dot notation to reference its property like item.quantity . Its index in the collection can be referenced by itemStatus.index . (line 12)
- With power of EL, we can implement simple presentation logic on the ZUL. Here we display quantity number in red color when it's less than 3. (line 14)
Binding on Grid
The usage is similar for grid.
Collection binding usage for grid
<grid model="@load(vm.orders)">
<columns>
<column label="Id"/>
<column label="Quantity"/>
<column label="Price"/>
</columns>
<template name="model" var="item" >
<row>
<label value="@bind(item.id)"/>
<label value="@bind(item.quantity)"/>
<label value="@bind(item.price)"/>
</row>
</template>
</grid>
Dynamic Template
Dynamic template enables developers to specify which template to apply upon different conditions when rendering a container component, e.g. grid. It is supported in grid, listbox, combobox, selectbox, and tree also. You can use this feature with @template( [EL-expression] ). The binder will treat evaluation result of EL expression as a template's name and look for corresponding template to render child components. If specified template doesn't exist in current component, it looks up parent component's template. If no @template assigned, it uses template that named model by default.
Default case
<grid model="@bind(vm.nodes)">
<template name="model">
<!-- child components -->
</template>
</grid>
Template name specified.
<grid model="@bind(vm.nodes) @template('myTemplate')">
<template name="myTemplate">
<!-- child components -->
</template>
</grid>
You could use EL to decide which template to use.
Conditional
<grid model="@bind(vm.nodes) @template(vm.type='foo'?'template1':'template2')">
<template name="template1">
<!-- child components -->
</template>
<template name="template2">
<!-- child components -->
</template>
</grid>
It also provides implicit variable: each (the instance of item in binding collection) and eachStatus (the iteration status) when evaluating the template for each row.
<grid model="@bind(vm.nodes) @template(each.type='A'?'template1':'template2')">
<template name="template1">
<!-- child components -->
</template>
<template name="template2">
<!-- child components -->
</template>
</grid>
- Assume that the object in binding collection has a property "type". Its value could be A or B. (line 1)
Version History
Version | Date | Content |
---|---|---|
6.0.0 | February 2012 | The MVVM was introduced. |