Message Box
Message Boxes with Servlet Thread
When Messagebox.show(String) is called, it returns immediately after showing the message dialog. Furthermore, it always returns Messagebox.OK
. Thus, it is meaningless to show buttons other than the OK button. For example, the if
clause in the following example is never true.
if (Messagebox.show("Delete?", "Prompt", Messagebox.YES|Messagebox.NO,
Messagebox.QUESTION) == Messagebox.YES) {
this_never_executes();
}
Rather, you have to provide an event listener as follows.
Messagebox.show("Delete?", "Prompt", Messagebox.YES|Messagebox.NO,
Messagebox.QUESTION,
new EventListener() {
public void onEvent(Event evt) {
switch (((Integer)evt.getData()).intValue()) {
case Messagebox.YES: doYes(); break; //the Yes button is pressed
case Messagebox.NO: doNo(); break; //the No button is pressed
}
}
}
);
The event listener you provided is invoked when the user clicks one of the buttons. Then, you can identify which button is clicked by examining the data (Event's getData
). The data is an integer whose value is the button's identifier, such as Messagebox.YES
.
Alternatively, you can examine the event name:
public void onEvent(Event evt) {
if ("onYes".equals(evt.getName())) {
doYes(); //the Yes button is pressed
} else if ("onNo".equals(evt.getName())) {
doNo(); //the No button is pressed
}
}
Note: The event name for the OK button is onOK
, not onOk
.
Notice: If you want to make it run under clustering environment, you shall implement SerializableEventListener. For more information, please refer to ZK Developer's Reference: Clustering.
Message Boxes with Event Thread
If the event thread is enabled, Messagebox.show(String) will suspend the thread until the end user makes the choice. Thus, the following code works correctly.
if (Messagebox.show("Delete?", "Prompt", Messagebox.YES|Messagebox.NO,
Messagebox.QUESTION) == Messagebox.YES) {
//execute only if the YES button is clicked
}