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Wednesday 3 April 2013

Inline PopUp with noteWindow (Excellent feature) in Oracle ADF

A very good and flexible component in adf is af:popup. we can use popup in various ways.
Suppose sometimes we need to show short description or some detail about any text ,button on Mouse Hover, then we can use inline PopUp (excellent look and feel)

For this you have to follow these steps-
  • Create a page in your bounded taskflow, drag an output text in page for that we are going to show Short Description.
  • Drag n drop a pop component in page in which we show description for that output text


Drop an af:popup component on page


  • Now drop a noteWindow under popup component 
Drop af:noteWindow component under popup





  •  and write your description in source of .jsff page in notewindow component
<af:popup childCreation="deferred" autoCancel="disabled" id="p1">
      <af:noteWindow id="nw1" inlineStyle="width:200px;" autoDismissalTimeout="5">
                       <p><b>Penguins</b> <b><font color="maroon">(order Sphenisciformes, family Spheniscidae)
                       are a group of aquatic, flightless birds living almost
                       exclusively in the southern hemisphere, especially in
                       Antarctica.</font></b> <b><font color="Green"> adapted for life in the water, penguins
                       have countershaded dark and white plumage, and their wings
                       have evolved into flippers</font></b></p>
      </af:noteWindow>
    </af:popup>
  • Drag showPopupBehavior inside output text for that you have to show that popUp
Use showPopupBehavior to show popup on mouse hover event

  • Now pass popup id in showPopupBehavior and set trigger type to mouseHover 
Set triggerType property of af:showPopupBehavior



  • Run your page and see how it look-- It is just awesome

    And this is very good that you can show graphs, tables and other information on this type of inline popUp 
    You can find sample application here- Download Sample Application

Sunday 3 March 2013

'filterFeatures' in ADF table column, caseInsensitive search in af:table filter

Quite small but useful trick-

In ADF table column when we apply search using filter it matches case (A-Z,a-z), means by default search is case sensitive, to change it you can change a property in column.



When you select a column and go to propertyInspector ,change 'filterFeatures' to 'caseInsensitive'
and It will search data in table without matching case

filterFeature property of table column to handle case sensitive search

Wednesday 2 January 2013

Invoke ADF Table Selection Listener, custom selection listener for af:table


Sometimes we need to define our own selection listener for adf table, or we have to perform some operation on row selection in af:table.

We can do this by defining custom selection listener for table in Managed bean.
In this tutorial i am showing a popup on table row selection , Here i am using Employees table of HR Schema
  • Prepare model and ViewController for Employees table and drag table in your page. Now select table and go to property Inspector , you will see its default selection listener 

Selection Listener of af:table


  • Now define your own (custom) selection listener for this table in your managed bean
Create custom selection listener in managed bean to handle selection event on af:table

  • Now write this code snippet on that custom selection listener,this code invokes its default listener and get the selected row. first you have to invoke its default listener that is
#{bindings.Employees1.collectionModel.makeCurrent}




    public void empTableSelectionListener(SelectionEvent selectionEvent) {
        ADFUtil.invokeEL("#{bindings.Employees1.collectionModel.makeCurrent}", new Class[] {SelectionEvent.class},
                         new Object[] { selectionEvent });
        // get the selected row , by this you can get any attribute of that row
        Row selectedRow =
            (Row)ADFUtil.evaluateEL("#{bindings.Employees1Iterator.currentRow}"); // get the current selected row
        //to show popup, you can write your logic here , what you wanna do
        showPopup(empPopup, true);
    }

  • you have to import these packages in order to invoke selection listener

import org.apache.myfaces.trinidad.event.SelectionEvent;
import org.apache.myfaces.trinidad.render.ExtendedRenderKitService;
import org.apache.myfaces.trinidad.util.Service;


  • In above code snippet ADFUtil is an utility class that contains methods for invoking EL (Expression language), so you have to make a Java class named ADFUtil in same package as bean
import java.util.Map;

import javax.el.ELContext;
import javax.el.ExpressionFactory;
import javax.el.MethodExpression;
import javax.el.ValueExpression;

import javax.faces.context.FacesContext;

import oracle.adf.model.BindingContext;
import oracle.adf.model.DataControlFrame;


/**
 * Provides various utility methods that are handy to
 * have around when working with ADF.
 */

public class ADFUtil {

/**
* When a bounded task flow manages a transaction (marked as requires-transaction,.
* requires-new-transaction, or requires-existing-transaction), then the
* task flow must issue any commits or rollbacks that are needed. This is
* essentially to keep the state of the transaction that the task flow understands
* in synch with the state of the transaction in the ADFbc layer.
*
* Use this method to issue a commit in the middle of a task flow while staying
* in the task flow.
*/

public static void saveAndContinue() {
Map sessionMap =
FacesContext.getCurrentInstance().getExternalContext().getSessionMap();
BindingContext context =
(BindingContext)sessionMap.get(BindingContext.CONTEXT_ID);
String currentFrameName = context.getCurrentDataControlFrame();
DataControlFrame dcFrame =
context.findDataControlFrame(currentFrameName);

dcFrame.commit();
dcFrame.beginTransaction(null);
}

/**
* Programmatic evaluation of EL.
*
* @param el EL to evaluate
* @return Result of the evaluation
*/

public static Object evaluateEL(String el) {
FacesContext facesContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
ELContext elContext = facesContext.getELContext();
ExpressionFactory expressionFactory =
facesContext.getApplication().getExpressionFactory();
ValueExpression exp =
expressionFactory.createValueExpression(elContext, el,
Object.class);

return exp.getValue(elContext);
}

/**
* Programmatic invocation of a method that an EL evaluates to.
* The method must not take any parameters.
*
* @param el EL of the method to invoke
* @return Object that the method returns
*/

public static Object invokeEL(String el) {
return invokeEL(el, new Class[0], new Object[0]);
}

/**
* Programmatic invocation of a method that an EL evaluates to.
*
* @param el EL of the method to invoke
* @param paramTypes Array of Class defining the types of the parameters
* @param params Array of Object defining the values of the parametrs
* @return Object that the method returns
*/

public static Object invokeEL(String el, Class[] paramTypes,
Object[] params) {
FacesContext facesContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
ELContext elContext = facesContext.getELContext();
ExpressionFactory expressionFactory =
facesContext.getApplication().getExpressionFactory();
MethodExpression exp =
expressionFactory.createMethodExpression(elContext, el,
Object.class, paramTypes);

return exp.invoke(elContext, params);
}

/**
* Sets a value into an EL object. Provides similar functionality to
* the <af:setActionListener> tag, except the from is
* not an EL. You can get similar behavior by using the following...

* setEL(to, evaluateEL(from))
*
* @param el EL object to assign a value
* @param val Value to assign
*/

public static void setEL(String el, Object val) {
FacesContext facesContext = FacesContext.getCurrentInstance();
ELContext elContext = facesContext.getELContext();
ExpressionFactory expressionFactory =
facesContext.getApplication().getExpressionFactory();
ValueExpression exp =
expressionFactory.createValueExpression(elContext, el,
Object.class);

exp.setValue(elContext, val);
}
}