Chapter 6: Implementing CRUD"

From Documentation
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'''Binding input components to selected item's properties'''
 
'''Binding input components to selected item's properties'''
<source lang='xml' high='2,3,5,6,17,26,31, 32'>
+
<source lang='xml' high='2,3,5,6,17,27,32,33'>
  
 
<vlayout  
 
<vlayout  
Line 688: Line 688:
  
 
</source>
 
</source>
* Line 2: Here we create a form binding at <tt>form</tt> attribute and give the middle object's id fx. Specify <tt>@load(vm.selectedTodo)</tt> makes the binder load selected todo's properties to the middle object and <tt>@save(vm.selectedTodo, before='updateTodo')</tt> makes the binder save middle object's data back to <tt>vm.selectedTodo</tt> before executing the command <tt>updateTodo</tt>, bound in line 36.
+
* Line 2,3: Here we create a form binding at <tt>form</tt> attribute and give the middle object's id fx. Specify <tt>@load(vm.selectedTodo)</tt> makes the binder load selected todo's properties to the middle object and <tt>@save(vm.selectedTodo, before='updateTodo')</tt> makes the binder save middle object's data back to <tt>vm.selectedTodo</tt> before executing the command <tt>updateTodo</tt>, bound in line 36.
* Line 4,5,16,25,30: Binding each input field to each property of the middle object through <tt>fx</tt>.
+
* Line 5,6,17,27,32,33: Binding each input field to each property of the middle object through <tt>fx</tt>.
* Line 16: Binding model of ''Radiogroup'' to <tt>vm.priorityList</tt> to display 3 priority levels.
+
* Line 17: Binding model of ''Radiogroup'' to <tt>vm.priorityList</tt> to display 3 priority levels.
  
  

Revision as of 10:05, 2 July 2014

Stop.png This article is out of date, please refer to http://books.zkoss.org/zkessentials-book/master/ for more up to date information.



Target Application

In this chapter, we are going to build a todo list management application with 4 basic operations, Create, Read, Update, and Delete (CRUD). The application's user interface looks like the images below:

Tutorial-ch6-app.png

Select an Item:

Tutorial-ch6-app-selected.png
Select a Todo Item


It is a personal todo list management system and it has following features:

  1. List all todo items
  2. Create a todo item.
    Type item name in upper-left textbox and click Tutorial-ch6-plus.png or press "Enter" key to create a new todo item.
  3. Finish a todo item.
    Click the checkbox in front of a todo item to mark it as finished and the item name will be decorated with line-through.
  4. Modify a todo item.
    Click an existing item and the detail editor appears. Then you can edit the item's details.
  5. Delete a todo item.
    Click Tutorial-ch6-cross.png to delete an existing todo item.


In this chapter, we will show how to implement the target application using both the MVC and MVVM approaches. If you are not familiar with these two approaches, we suggest you to read Get ZK Up and Running with MVC and Get ZK Up and Running with MVVM. These two approaches are mutually interchangeable. You can choose one of them depending on your situation.

MVC Approach

If you have read previous chapters, constructing the user interface for the example application should not be a big problem. Let's look at the layout first and ignore the details.

Layout in chapter6/todolist-mvc.zul

<?link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/style.css"?>
<window apply="org.zkoss.essentials.chapter6.mvc.TodoListController" 
	border="normal" hflex="1" vflex="1" contentStyle="overflow:auto">
	<caption src="/imgs/todo.png" sclass="fn-caption" label="Todo List (MVC)"/>
	<borderlayout>
		<center autoscroll="true" border="none">
			<vlayout hflex="1" vflex="1">
				<!-- todo creation function-->	
				<!-- todo list -->
			</vlayout>
		</center>
		<east id="selectedTodoBlock" visible="false" 
		width="300px" border="none" collapsible="false" 
		splittable="true" minsize="300" autoscroll="true">
			<vlayout >
				<!-- detail editor -->
			</vlayout>
		</east>
	</borderlayout>
</window>
  • Line 5: We construct the user interface with a Border Layout to separate user interface into 2 areas.
  • Line 6: The center area contains a todo creation function and a todo list.
  • Line 12, 13: The east area is a todo item detail editor which is invisible if no item selected.


Read

As we talked in previous chapters, we can use Template to define how to display a data model list with implicit variable each.

Display a ToDo List

...
	<listbox id="todoListbox" vflex="1">
		<listhead>
			<listheader width="30px" />
			<listheader/>
			<listheader hflex="min"/>
		</listhead>
		<template name="model">
			<listitem sclass="${each.complete?'complete-todo':''}" 
				value="${each}">
				<listcell>
					<checkbox forward="onCheck=todoListbox.onTodoCheck" 
						checked="${each.complete}"/>
				</listcell>
				<listcell>
					<label value="${each.subject}"/>
				</listcell>
				<listcell>
					<button forward="onClick=todoListbox.onTodoDelete" 
						image="/imgs/cross.png" width="36px"/>
				</listcell>
			</listitem>
		</template>
	</listbox>
...
  • Line 8: The default value for the required attribute name is "model".
  • Line 10: The ${each} is an implicit variable that you can use without declaration inside Template, and it represents each object of the data model list. We can implement simple presentation logic with EL expressions. Here we apply different styles according to a flag each.complete. We also set a whole object in value attribute, and later we can get the object in the controller.
  • Line 13: The each.complete is a boolean variable so that we can assign it to checked. By doing this, the Checkbox will be checked if the todo item's complete variable is true.
  • Line 12, 19: The forward attribute is used to forward events to another component and we will talk about it in later sections.

In the controller, we should provide a data model for the Listbox.

public class TodoListController extends SelectorComposer<Component>{


	//wire components
	...
	@Wire
	Listbox todoListbox;
	
	...
	
	//services
	TodoListService todoListService = new TodoListServiceChapter6Impl();
	
	//data for the view
	ListModelList<Todo> todoListModel;
	ListModelList<Priority> priorityListModel;
	Todo selectedTodo;
	
	
	@Override
	public void doAfterCompose(Component comp) throws Exception{
		super.doAfterCompose(comp);
		
		//get data from service and wrap it to list-model for the view
		List<Todo> todoList = todoListService.getTodoList();
		todoListModel = new ListModelList<Todo>(todoList);
		todoListbox.setModel(todoListModel);
		
		...
	}
...
}
  • Line 25 ~ 27: We initialize the data model in doAfterCompose(). Get data from the service class todoListService and create a ListModelList object. Then set it as the data model of todoListbox.


There is a priority radiogroup in todo item detail editor appeared on the right hand side when you select an item.

Tutorial-ch6-priority.png
Todo Item's Priority Radiogroup

In our application, its priority labels come from an enumerating Priority instead of a static text. We can still use Template to define how to create each Radio under a Radiogroup. The zul looks like as follows:

...
		<row>
			<cell sclass="row-title">Priority :</cell>
			<cell>
				<radiogroup id="selectedTodoPriority">
					<template name="model">
						<radio label="${each.label}"/>	
					</template>
				</radiogroup>
			</cell>
		</row>
...
  • Line 6 ~8: Define how to create each Radio with Template and assign each.label to label attribute.


We also need to provide a data model for the Radiogroup in the controller:

public class TodoListController extends SelectorComposer<Component>{


	//wire components
	...
	@Wire
	Listbox todoListbox;
	
	...
	@Wire
	Radiogroup selectedTodoPriority;
	...
	
	//services
	TodoListService todoListService = new TodoListServiceChapter6Impl();
	
	//data for the view
	ListModelList<Todo> todoListModel;
	ListModelList<Priority> priorityListModel;
	Todo selectedTodo;	
	
	@Override
	public void doAfterCompose(Component comp) throws Exception{
		super.doAfterCompose(comp);
		
		//get data from service and wrap it to list-model for the view
		List<Todo> todoList = todoListService.getTodoList();
		todoListModel = new ListModelList<Todo>(todoList);
		todoListbox.setModel(todoListModel);
		
		priorityListModel = new ListModelList<Priority>(Priority.values());
		selectedTodoPriority.setModel(priorityListModel);
	}
...
}
  • Line 31, 32: Create a ListModelList with Priority and set it as a model of selectedTodoPriority.

Create

After typing the todo item name, we can save the item by either clicking the button with the plus icon (Tutorial-ch6-plus.png) or pressing "Enter" key. Therefore, we have to listen to 2 events: onClick and onOK. For handling other key pressing events, please refer to ZK_Developer's_Reference/UI_Patterns/Keystroke_Handling.

public class TodoListController extends SelectorComposer<Component>{

	//wire components
	@Wire
	Textbox todoSubject;
	
	//services
	TodoListService todoListService = new TodoListServiceChapter6Impl();
	
	//data for the view
	ListModelList<Todo> todoListModel;
	ListModelList<Priority> priorityListModel;
	Todo selectedTodo;

	...

	//when user clicks on the button or enters on the textbox
	@Listen("onClick = #addTodo; onOK = #todoSubject")
	public void doTodoAdd(){
		//get user input from view
		String subject = todoSubject.getValue();
		if(Strings.isBlank(subject)){
			Clients.showNotification("Nothing to do ?",todoSubject);
		}else{
			//save data
			selectedTodo = todoListService.saveTodo(new Todo(subject));
			//update the model of listbox
			todoListModel.add(selectedTodo);
			//set the new selection
			todoListModel.addToSelection(selectedTodo);
			
			//refresh detail view
			refreshDetailView();
			
			//reset value for fast typing.
			todoSubject.setValue("");
		}
	}
...
}
  • Line 18: Listen the button's onClick event and "Enter" key pressing event: onOK.
  • Line 19: This method adds a todo item, update the data model of Listbox, change the selection to a newly created one, then reset the input field of the Textbox.
  • Line 21: Get user input in the Textbox todoSubject by getValue().
  • Line 23: Show a notification at the right hand side of the Textbox todoSubject.
  • Line 28: When you change (add or remove) items in a ListModelList object, it will automatically render in the Listbox's.
  • Line 30: Call addToSelection() to assign a component's selection and it will automatically reflect to the corresponding widget's selection.

Update

To update a todo item, you should select an item first then detail editor will appear. The following codes demonstrate how to listen a "onSelect" event and display the item's detail.

public class TodoListController extends SelectorComposer<Component>{


	//wire components
	@Wire
	Textbox todoSubject;
	@Wire
	Button addTodo;
	@Wire
	Listbox todoListbox;
	
	@Wire
	Component selectedTodoBlock;
	@Wire
	Checkbox selectedTodoCheck;
	@Wire
	Textbox selectedTodoSubject;
	@Wire
	Radiogroup selectedTodoPriority;
	@Wire
	Datebox selectedTodoDate;
	@Wire
	Textbox selectedTodoDescription;
	@Wire
	Button updateSelectedTodo;


	//when user selects a todo of the listbox
	@Listen("onSelect = #todoListbox")
	public void doTodoSelect() {
		if(todoListModel.isSelectionEmpty()){
			//just in case for the no selection
			selectedTodo = null;
		}else{
			selectedTodo = todoListModel.getSelection().iterator().next();
		}
		refreshDetailView();
	}

	private void refreshDetailView() {
		//refresh the detail view of selected todo
		if(selectedTodo==null){
			//clean
			selectedTodoBlock.setVisible(false);
			selectedTodoCheck.setChecked(false);
			selectedTodoSubject.setValue(null);
			selectedTodoDate.setValue(null);
			selectedTodoDescription.setValue(null);
			updateSelectedTodo.setDisabled(true);
			
			priorityListModel.clearSelection();
		}else{
			selectedTodoBlock.setVisible(true);
			selectedTodoCheck.setChecked(selectedTodo.isComplete());
			selectedTodoSubject.setValue(selectedTodo.getSubject());
			selectedTodoDate.setValue(selectedTodo.getDate());
			selectedTodoDescription.setValue(selectedTodo.getDescription());
			updateSelectedTodo.setDisabled(false);
			
			priorityListModel.addToSelection(selectedTodo.getPriority());
		}
	}
...
}
  • Line 29: Use @Listen to listen onSelect event of the Listbox whose id is todoListbox.
  • Line 30: This method checks todoListModel's selection and refreshes the detail editor.
  • Line 35: Get user selection from data model by getSelection() which returns a Set.
  • Line 40: If an item is selected, it makes detail editor visible and pushes data into those input components of the editor by calling setter methods. If no item is selected, it makes detail editor invisible and clear all input components' value.
  • Line 53: Make the detail editor visible when selectedTodo is not null.
  • Line 60: Use addToSelection() to assign a component's selection and it will automatically reflect to the corresponding widget's selection.


After modifying the item's detail, you can click the "Update" button to save the modification or "Reload" to revert back original data. The following codes demonstrate how to implement these functions:

Handle clicking "update" and "reload" button

	//when user clicks the update button
	@Listen("onClick = #updateSelectedTodo")
	public void doUpdateClick(){
		if(Strings.isBlank(selectedTodoSubject.getValue())){
			Clients.showNotification("Nothing to do ?",selectedTodoSubject);
			return;
		}
		
		selectedTodo.setComplete(selectedTodoCheck.isChecked());
		selectedTodo.setSubject(selectedTodoSubject.getValue());
		selectedTodo.setDate(selectedTodoDate.getValue());
		selectedTodo.setDescription(selectedTodoDescription.getValue());
		selectedTodo.setPriority(priorityListModel.getSelection().iterator().next());
		
		//save data and get updated Todo object
		selectedTodo = todoListService.updateTodo(selectedTodo);
		
		//replace original Todo object in listmodel with updated one
		todoListModel.set(todoListModel.indexOf(selectedTodo), selectedTodo);
		
		//show message for user
		Clients.showNotification("Todo saved");
	}
	
	//when user clicks the update button
	@Listen("onClick = #reloadSelectedTodo")
	public void doReloadClick(){
		refreshDetailView();
	}
  • Line 4: Validate user input and show a notification.
  • Line 9 ~ 13: Update selected Todo by getting user input from components.
  • Line 16, 19: We save the selected Todo object and get an updated one. Then, we replace the old one in the list model with the updated one.


Complete a Todo

Click a Checkbox in front of a todo item means to finish it. To implement this feature, the first problem is: how do we know which Checkbox is checked as there are many of them. We cannot listen to a Checkbox event as they are created in template using @Listen("onCheck = #todoListbox checkbox"),thus are created dynamically. Therefore, we introduce the "Event Forwarding" feature to demonstrate ZK's flexibility. This feature can forward an event from a component to another component, so we can forward an onCheck event from each Checkbox to the Listbox that encloses it, then we can just listen to the Listbox's events instead of all events of Checkbox.

extracted from chapter6/todolist-mvc.zul

...
	<listbox id="todoListbox" vflex="1">
...
		<template name="model">
			<listitem sclass="${each.complete?'complete-todo':''}" value="${each}">
				<listcell>
					<checkbox forward="onCheck=todoListbox.onTodoCheck" checked="${each.complete}"/>
				</listcell>
				<listcell>
					<label value="${each.subject}"/>
				</listcell>
				<listcell>
					<button forward="onClick=todoListbox.onTodoDelete" image="/imgs/cross.png" width="36px"/>
				</listcell>
			</listitem>
		</template>
  • Line 7: Forward the Checkbox's onCheck to an event onTodoCheck of a Listbox whose id is todoListbox. The onTodoCheck is a customized forward event name, and you can use whatever name you want. Then we can use @Listen to listen this special event name.


Next, we listen to the customized event onTodoCheck and mark the todo as finished.

public class TodoListController extends SelectorComposer<Component>{
...

	//when user checks on the checkbox of each todo on the list
	@Listen("onTodoCheck = #todoListbox")
	public void doTodoCheck(ForwardEvent evt){
		//get data from event
		Checkbox cbox = (Checkbox)evt.getOrigin().getTarget();
		Listitem litem = (Listitem)cbox.getParent().getParent();
		
		boolean checked = cbox.isChecked();
		Todo todo = (Todo)litem.getValue();
		todo.setComplete(checked);
		
		//save data
		todo = todoListService.updateTodo(todo);
		if(todo.equals(selectedTodo)){
			selectedTodo = todo;
			//refresh detail view
			refreshDetailView();
		}
		//update listitem style
		((Listitem)cbox.getParent().getParent()).setSclass(checked?"complete-todo":"");
	}
...
}
  • Line 5: Listen to the customized event name onTodoCheck of a Listbox todoListbox for we already forward onCheck to the Listbox in the zul.
  • Line 6: An event listener method can have a argument, but argument's type depends on which event you listen. As the customized event is forwarded from another component, the argument should be ForwardEvent. This method set the Todo object of the selected item as complete and decorate Listitem with line-through by changing its sclass.
  • Line 8: You should call getOrigin() to get the original event that is forwarded. Every event object has a method getTarget() that allows you get the target component that receives the event.
  • Line 9: Navigate the component tree by getParent().
  • Line 12: Here we get Todo object of the selected todo item from value attribute that we assigned in the zul by <listitem ... value="${each}"/>

Delete

Implement deletion feature is similar to completing a todo item. We also forward each delete button's (Tutorial-ch6-cross.png) onClick event to the Listbox that encloses those buttons.

Forward delete button's onClick

	<listbox id="todoListbox" vflex="1">
...
		<template name="model">
			<listitem sclass="${each.complete?'complete-todo':''}" 
						value="${each}">
				<listcell>
					<checkbox forward="onCheck=todoListbox.onTodoCheck" 
								checked="${each.complete}"/>
				</listcell>
				<listcell>
					<label value="${each.subject}"/>
				</listcell>
				<listcell>
					<button forward="onClick=todoListbox.onTodoDelete" 
						image="/imgs/cross.png" width="36px"/>
				</listcell>
			</listitem>
		</template>
...
  • Line 14, 15: Forward delete button's onClick to the Listbox's as a custom forward event named onTodoDelete.

Then we can listen to the forwarded event and perform deletion.

	//when user clicks the delete button of each todo on the list
	@Listen("onTodoDelete = #todoListbox")
	public void doTodoDelete(ForwardEvent evt){
		Button btn = (Button)evt.getOrigin().getTarget();
		Listitem litem = (Listitem)btn.getParent().getParent();
		
		Todo todo = (Todo)litem.getValue();
		
		//delete data
		todoListService.deleteTodo(todo);
		
		//update the model of listbox
		todoListModel.remove(todo);
		
		if(todo.equals(selectedTodo)){
			//refresh selected todo view
			selectedTodo = null;
			refreshDetailView();
		}
	}
  • Line 2: Listen the customized event name onTodoDelete of a Listbox that we forward from delete button.
  • Line 7: Since we have set each Todo object to each Listitem's value in the zul, we can get it by getValue()


After completing the above steps, vist http://localhost:8080/essentials/chapter6/todolist-mvc.zul to see the result.

MVVM Approach

Building a user interface for the example application using the MVVM approach is very similar to building it using the MVC approach, however, you don't need to give an id to components since we don't need to identify components for wiring. For defining the ViewModel's properties, we should analyse what data required to display on the user interface or to be kept as a View's state. There are 4 types of data, todo item's subject for creating a new todo item, todo item list for displaying all todos, selected todo item for keeping user selection, and todo's priority list for Radiogroup in detail editor.

public class TodoListViewModel implements Serializable{

	
	//data for the view
	String subject;
	ListModelList<Todo> todoListModel;
	Todo selectedTodo;

	public List<Priority> getPriorityList(){
		return Arrays.asList(Priority.values());
	}

	//omit property accessor methods and others
...
}
  • A property is retrieved by a getter, so ViewModel doesn't have to declare a variable for a property.


Read

As we discussed in previous chapter, displaying a collection of data requires to prepare a data model in the ViewModel.

public class TodoListViewModel implements Serializable{

	
	//services
	TodoListService todoListService = new TodoListServiceChapter6Impl();
	
	//data for the view
	String subject;
	ListModelList<Todo> todoListModel;
	Todo selectedTodo;

	@Init // @Init annotates a initial method
	public void init(){
		//get data from service and wrap it to model for the view
		List<Todo> todoList = todoListService.getTodoList();
		//you can use List directly, however use ListModelList provide efficient control in MVVM 
		todoListModel = new ListModelList<Todo>(todoList);
	}

...
}
  • Line 17: Initialize ListModelList with todoList retrieved with a service class.

Then we can bind Listbox's model to prepared data model of the ViewModel with data binding expression.

	<listbox model="@bind(vm.todoListModel)" 
		selectedItem="@bind(vm.selectedTodo)" vflex="1" >
		<listhead>
			<listheader width="30px" />
			<listheader/>
			<listheader hflex="min"/>
		</listhead>
		<template name="model">
			<listitem sclass="@bind(each.complete?'complete-todo':'')">
				<listcell>
					<checkbox checked="@bind(each.complete)" 
						onCheck="@command('completeTodo',todo=each)"/>
				</listcell>
				<listcell>
					<label value="@bind(each.subject)"/>
				</listcell>
				<listcell>
					<button onClick="@command('deleteTodo',todo=each)" 
						image="/imgs/cross.png" width="36px"/>
				</listcell>
			</listitem>
		</template>
	</listbox>
  • Line 1, 2: Set Listbox's data model by binding model attribute to a property of type ListModelList. Binding selecteditem to vm.selectedTodo to keep user selection in the ViewModel.
  • Line 9: You can fill any valid EL expression In a data binding annotation, so that you can implement simple presentation logic with EL. Here we set sclass according to a Todo object's complete property.
  • Line 11, 12, 15: Use implicit variable each to access each Todo object in the data model.

Create

We can create a new todo item by either clicking the button with plus icon (Tutorial-ch6-plus.png) or pressing the "Enter" key, therefore we can bind these two events to the same command method that adds a todo item.

Command method addTodo

	@Command //@Command annotates a command method 
	@NotifyChange({"selectedTodo","subject"}) //@NotifyChange annotates data changed notification after calling this method 
	public void addTodo(){
		if(Strings.isBlank(subject)){
			Clients.showNotification("Subject is blank, nothing to do ?");
		}else{
			//save data
			selectedTodo = todoListService.saveTodo(new Todo(subject));
			//update the model, by using ListModelList, you don't need to notify todoListModel change
			//it is efficient that only update one item of the listbox
			todoListModel.add(selectedTodo);
			todoListModel.addToSelection(selectedTodo);
			
			//reset value for fast typing.
			subject = null;
		}
	}
  • Line 2: You can notify multiple properties change by filling an array of String. Here we specify {"selectedTodo","subject"}, since we change them in the method.

We can see that the benefits of abstraction provided by command binding allows developers to bind different events to the same command without affecting the ViewModel.

Binding to addTodo

				<hbox align="center" hflex="1" sclass="todo-box">
					<textbox value="@bind(vm.subject)" 
						onOK="@command('addTodo')" 
							hflex="1" placeholder="What needs to be done?"/>
					<button onClick="@command('addTodo')" 
						image="/imgs/plus.png" width="36px"/>
				</hbox>
  • Line 2~6: The onOK and onClick can invoke the same command method.

Update

How do we achieve the feature that selecting a todo item then detail editor becomes visible under MVVM? Simple, just determine editor's visibility upon selected todo item is null or not.

		<east visible="@bind(not empty vm.selectedTodo)" width="300px" 
		border="none" collapsible="false" splittable="true" 
		minsize="300" autoscroll="true">
		<!-- todo item detail editor-->
		</east>
  • Line 1: ZK bind monitors all binding properties. If one property changes, ZK bind re-evaluates those binding expressions that bind to the changed property.


In order to make selected todo item's properties display in the detail editor, we just bind input components in the detail editor to the corresponding selectedTodo's properties.

Binding input components to selected item's properties

	<vlayout 
	form="@id('fx') @load(vm.selectedTodo) 
		@save(vm.selectedTodo, before='updateTodo')">
		<hbox align="center"  hflex="1">
			<checkbox checked="@bind(fx.complete)"/> 
			<textbox value="@bind(fx.subject)" hflex="1" />
		</hbox>		
		<grid hflex="1">
			<columns>
				<column align="right" hflex="min"/>
				<column/>
			</columns>
			<rows>
				<row>
					<cell sclass="row-title">Priority :</cell>
					<cell>
						<radiogroup model="@bind(vm.priorityList)" 
							selectedItem="@bind(fx.priority)">
							<template name="model">
								<radio label="@bind(each.label)"/>	
							</template>
						</radiogroup>
					</cell>
				</row>
				<row>
					<cell sclass="row-title">Date :</cell>
					<cell><datebox value="@bind(fx.date)" width="200px"/></cell>
				</row>
				<row>
					<cell sclass="row-title">Description :</cell>
					<cell>
						<textbox value="@bind(fx.description)" multiline="true" 
							hflex="1" height="200px" />
					</cell>
				</row>
			</rows>
		</grid>
		<hlayout>
			<button onClick="@command('updateTodo')" label="Update"/>
			<button onClick="@command('reloadTodo')" label="Reload"/>
		</hlayout>
	</vlayout>
  • Line 2,3: Here we create a form binding at form attribute and give the middle object's id fx. Specify @load(vm.selectedTodo) makes the binder load selected todo's properties to the middle object and @save(vm.selectedTodo, before='updateTodo') makes the binder save middle object's data back to vm.selectedTodo before executing the command updateTodo, bound in line 36.
  • Line 5,6,17,27,32,33: Binding each input field to each property of the middle object through fx.
  • Line 17: Binding model of Radiogroup to vm.priorityList to display 3 priority levels.


After modifying item's detail, you can click the "Update" button to save the modification or "Reload" to revert back original data. These two functions are implemented in command methods:

	@Command 
	@NotifyChange("selectedTodo")
	public void updateTodo(){
		//update data
		selectedTodo = todoListService.updateTodo(selectedTodo);
		
		//update the model, by using ListModelList, you don't need to notify todoListModel change
		//by reseting an item , it make listbox only refresh one item
		todoListModel.set(todoListModel.indexOf(selectedTodo), selectedTodo);
	}
	
	//when user clicks the update button
	@Command @NotifyChange("selectedTodo")
	public void reloadTodo(){
		//do nothing, the selectedTodo will reload by notify change
	}
  • Line 9: ListModelList can update its change to the client automatically, you don't have to notify change of todoListModel.


then we can invoke them by command binding:

				<hlayout>
					<button onClick="@command('updateTodo')" label="Update"/>
					<button onClick="@command('reloadTodo')" label="Reload"/>
				</hlayout>

Input Validation

Under MVVM approach, ZK provides a validator to help developers perform user input validation. Validator is a reusable element that performs validation. If you bind a component's attribute to a validator, binder will use it to validate attribute's value automatically before saving to a ViewModel or to a middle object. Here we implement a validator to avoid empty value of todo's subject.


Define a validator in the ViewModel

	//the validator is the class to validate data before set ui data back to todo
	public Validator getTodoValidator(){
		return new AbstractValidator() {
			
			public void validate(ValidationContext ctx) {
				//get the form that will be applied to todo
				Form fx = (Form)ctx.getProperty().getValue();
				//get filed subject of the form
				String subject = (String)fx.getField("subject");
				
				if(Strings.isBlank(subject)){
					Clients.showNotification("Subject is blank, nothing to do ?");
					//mark the validation is invalid, so the data will not update to bean
					//and the further command will be skipped.
					ctx.setInvalid();
				}
			}
		};
	}
  • Line 2: Returning a validator object by a getter method makes it as a ViewModel's property, so we can bind it to an attribute.
  • Line 3: In most case, we can create a validator by extending AbstractValidator and override validate() instead of creating from scratch.
  • Line 7: Get user input from ValidationContext. In our example, because we will apply this validator to form binding, we expect ctx.getProperty().getValue() returns a Form object.
  • Line 9: You can get every field that middle object contains with a property name.
  • Line 15: Call set Invalid() to fail the validation then further command execution will be skipped.

Then apply this validator with data binding expression.

	<vlayout 
	form="@id('fx') @load(vm.selectedTodo) @save(vm.selectedTodo, before='updateTodo') @validator(vm.todoValidator)">

Hence, if vm.todoValidator fails validation, ZK won't execute updateTodo command. Then binder won't save value to selectedTodo.

Complete a Todo

We want clicking a Checkbox in front of each todo item to complete a todo item. First, we implement business logic to complete a todo item.

	@Command 
	//@NotifyChange("selectedTodo") //use postNotifyChange() to notify dynamically
	public void completeTodo(@BindingParam("todo") Todo todo){
		//save data
		todo = todoListService.updateTodo(todo);
		if(todo.equals(selectedTodo)){
			selectedTodo = todo;
			//for the case that notification is decided dynamically
			//you can use BindUtils.postNotifyChange to notify a value changed
			BindUtils.postNotifyChange(null, null, this, "selectedTodo");
		}
	}
  • LIne 3: ZK allows you to pass any object or value that can be referenced by EL on a ZUL to command method through command binding annotation. Your command method's signature should have a corresponding parameter that is annotated with @BindingParam with the same type and key.
  • Line 10: We demonstrate programmatic way to notify change by BindUtils.postNotifyChange(). We leave the first and second parameters to null as default. The third parameters is the target bean that is changed and the fourth parameter is the changed property name.


Then we bind onCheck to the command completeTodo.

	<template name="model">
		<listitem sclass="@bind(each.complete?'complete-todo':'')">
			<listcell>
				<checkbox checked="@bind(each.complete)" onCheck="@command('completeTodo',todo=each)"/>
			</listcell>
			...
		</listitem>
	</template>
  • Line 4: Command binding allows you to pass an arguments in key-value pairs. We pass each object with key todo.

Delete

Implementing a delete function is very similar to "completing a todo", we perform business logic and notify change.

	@Command 
	//@NotifyChange("selectedTodo") //use postNotifyChange() to notify dynamically
	public void deleteTodo(@BindingParam("todo") Todo todo){
		//save data
		todoListService.deleteTodo(todo);
		
		//update the model, by using ListModelList, you don't need to notify todoListModel change
		todoListModel.remove(todo);
		
		if(todo.equals(selectedTodo)){
			//refresh selected todo view
			selectedTodo = null;
			//for the case that notification is decided dynamically
			BindUtils.postNotifyChange(null, null, this, "selectedTodo");
		}
	}
  • Line 8: When you change (add or remove) items in a ListModelList object, it will automatically reflect to Listbox's rendering.


Next, bind onClick to the command deleteTodo then we are done editing this function.

					<template name="model">
						<listitem sclass="@bind(each.complete?'complete-todo':'')">
							<listcell>
								<checkbox checked="@bind(each.complete)" onCheck="@command('completeTodo',todo=each)"/>
							</listcell>
							<listcell>
								<label value="@bind(each.subject)"/>
							</listcell>
							<listcell>
								<button onClick="@command('deleteTodo',todo=each)" image="/imgs/cross.png" width="36px"/>
							</listcell>
						</listitem>
					</template>
  • Line 10: In order to know which Todo object we should delete, we pass the deleting Todo by todo=each. The todo is key and each is value.


The key development activities under MVVM approach are designing a ViewModel, implementing command methods, and binding attributes to a ViewModel. You can see that the relationship between ZUL and ViewModel is relatively decoupling and only established by data binding expressions.

After completing above steps, please visit http://localhost:8080/essentials/chapter6/todolist-mvvm.zul to see the result.


Source Code




Last Update : 2014/07/02

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