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Foglight 5.9.3 - Web Component Tutorial

Using the Web Component Tutorial Tutorial 1: Drag and Drop Tutorial 2: Creating a Dashboard Tutorial 3: Adding a Drilldown Page Tutorial 4: Adding Views Tutorial 5: Using a Grid Tutorial 6: Reports Tutorial 7: Creating a Form Tutorial 8: Renderers Tutorial 9: Adding Questions and Answers Tutorial 10: Sending Messages to Other Users

Defining the Dialog

The storage type for the manager object is none, which means that each time the Form Dialog view is rendered, a new manager object is created, but this object is not saved. It is only when the company object is updated and saved that the data gathered here is written into that object, which contains a list of manager objects. See the Web Component Guide for information about the available storage mechanism choices.
Notice that the Action is Add Manager, accessed by choosing Invoke Function. A key (addManager) must be supplied, but in this tutorial it is not used anywhere but in the Flow type editor.
The required parameters for Add Manager (company and newManager) are associated with the context keys that supply the required values.
The Flow type is set to Previous, and the Update option is selected. When the popup is disposed, the table’s data is updated to show the new information.

Defining the Table of Managers

Defining the Top-Level Dashboard

In most designs, the table appears in a grid that holds the table along with other related views. We place the table in such a grid to complete the tutorial. Creating a dashboard is not covered in previous tutorials, so all that needs explaining here is the context entry. A structure is needed to hold the list of managers. By creating an instance of a company object in the dashboard, we also create a manager array that is initially null. Nonetheless, we can get a reference to it and create an empty list of managers the first time the Add Manager function is called. After that, manager entries can populate the list.

Note that the storage type for the company object is user, which means each different logon name has a different company object that is kept until the server is restarted. See the Web Component Guide for information about the available storage mechanism choices.

Summary

This tutorial introduces the usage of Bean Input components as a way of collecting data. Notice that very few context keys were declared, which makes it a much more efficient mechanism for collecting and storing data, especially when large amounts of data inputs are required.

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