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Oracle Fusion Middleware Java API Reference for Oracle Extension SDK Reference 11g Release 1 (11.1.1.4.0) E13403-05 |
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public interface Traversable
The methods defined in the Traversable interface
specify the operations that a UI component must support in order
to be traversed in complex UI widgets such as a property dialog,
a wizard, or any other panel-based UI.
Property dialogs and wizards typically involve some set of panels that are displayed to the user. In the case of property dialogs, the user can traverse the panels in a random-access manner; in wizards, the user traverses the panels in a sequential order. Often, the data structures being edited by the panels do not necessarily correspond to the structure of the panels. That is, a single panel may edit multiple data objects, or multiple panels may edit a single data object. Moreover, values displayed in one panel may also be affected by edits performed in another panel.
The Traversable interface specifies the protocol
through which panels can communicate indirectly with each other.
The onEntry(TraversableContext) and onExit(TraversableContext) methods comprise the main part of the
interaction. The getExitTransition() method is used when
the Traversable appears in an FSMWizard; a Traversable
that is not used in FSMWizard should just return null
from getExitTransition().
The Traversable implementation finds the data objects
that it needs by querying the TraversableContext. The
TraversableContext uses a Namespace to hold data
objects. Therefore the Traversable must be
able to find its data objects using predefined names. Consequently,
the names and data types of the required data objects must
be documented by every Traversable implementation. It
is then the responsibility of the UI container and the class
instantiating the UI container to ensure that the Namespace
is populated with the appropriate data objects before entering the
Traversable.
The Traversable interface is designed to allow a single
panel to be used in both a property dialog and a wizard. Generally,
a property dialog is used to edit the properties of an existing
object, and a wizard is used to guide the user through the creation
of a new object. In some cases, the property dialog and the wizard
are nearly identical and may even use the same panels; in other
cases, the wizard only displays the most commonly edited properties
and leaves the more advanced editing to be performed in the property
dialog. Panels that implement the Traversable
interface are available to be reused in either a property dialog or
a wizard, provided that the data objects are properly loaded into
the Namespace used by the TraversableContext.
MetaTraversable,
Navigable,
MDDPanel,
Step,
FSMWizard| Method Summary | |
|---|---|
java.awt.Component |
getComponent()
Normally, the Traversable class will itself be the
UI Component. |
java.lang.Object |
getExitTransition()
Returns the exit transition that can be used by a Traversable-aware wizard. |
java.lang.String |
getHelpID()
Returns the context-sensitive help topic ID to use for this Traversable. |
void |
onEntry(TraversableContext dataContext)
This method is called when the Traversable is being
entered. |
void |
onExit(TraversableContext dataContext)
This method is called when the Traversable is being
exited. |
| Method Detail |
|---|
void onEntry(TraversableContext dataContext)
Traversable is being
entered. The data that the Traversable should use
to populate its UI components comes from the specified
TraversableContext.
When the same Traversable is entered more than once
in the course of interacting with the user, the
Traversable needs to reload the data directly from
the TraversableContext rather than caching data objects.
Some reasons for this include:
Traversables may edit the data objects
or even replace them.
Traversable instance may be used
for editing multiple different instances of the same
object type.
TraversableContext is the
best way to ensure that the Traversable will not be
editing the wrong data.
The Traversable should not even cache references to
data objects between invocations of onEntry and
onExit(TraversableContext) because the UI container is
not required to guarantee that the references will be identical.
dataContext - The data wrapper where the
Traversable locates the data that it needs to
populate the UI.java.awt.Component getComponent()
Traversable class will itself be the
UI Component. Therefore, getComponent()
typically just returns this. In this situation
the getComponent() method then is simply a means
of avoiding a type cast.
In other cases, it would be useful to have the ability to return a
different Component based on the contents of the
TraversableContext that is passed to the
onEntry(TraversableContext) method. UI containers (e.g.
property dialogs and wizards) that are designed to use the
Traversable interface must call the
onEntry(TraversableContext) method before calling
getComponent(). This allows a Traversable
implementation to have the opportunity to configure the UI
Component or even create a new one before it is displayed.
In either situation, the implementation should strive to return
the same Component instance as often as possible rather
than creating a new instance becaues the UI container will call
this method frequently.
Component that the user interacts with
for creating or editing an object.
void onExit(TraversableContext dataContext)
throws TraversalException
Traversable is being
exited. At this point, the Traversable should copy
the data from its associated UI back into the data structures in
the TraversableContext.
If the Traversable should not be exited because the
user has entered either incomplete, invalid, or inconsistent data,
then this method can throw a TraversalException to
indicate to the property dialog or wizard that validation failed
and that the user should not be allowed to exit the current
Traversable. Refer to the TraversalException
javadoc for details on passing the error message that should be
shown to the user.
dataContext - The data object where changes made in the UI
should be copied so that the changes can be accessed by other
Traversables.
TraversalException - if the user has entered either
incomplete, invalid, or inconsistent data. This exception
prevents the property dialog or wizard from continuing and
forces the user to stay on the current Traversable
until the data entered is valid or the user cancels. The
exception class itself is capable of carrying an error message
that will be shown to the user. Refer to its javadoc for details.java.lang.Object getExitTransition()
Traversable-aware wizard. The wizard can use the
exit transition to direct the user through an alternate or
streamlined set of panels based on their current input.
If the Traversable implementation does not support
multiple exit transitions or is not used in a wizard, then this
method should just return null.
Traversable
that is used by dynamic interview-style wizards to determine
the next course of action. A Traversable class
that does not support multiple possible transitions should
just return null.java.lang.String getHelpID()
Traversable. A null return value means
that the Traversable implementation doesn't specify
a help topic ID. However, there are other ways that a help topic
ID could get associated with a Traversable.
Specifically, when a Traversable instance is created
by a MetaTraversable such as Step or
Navigable in the context of a Navigable
container such as MDDPanel, TabbedPanel or
FSMWizard, the help ID is searched according to the
following order:
MetaTraversable.getHelpID()
getHelpID(). This may lead into a
recursion if the Traversable's Component is a nested
Navigable container.
getComponent() )
Since a Navigable wraps a Traversable, and a Traversable wraps a Component, the priority order for determining the help ID is based on giving the outer-most wrapper the opportunity to override. The Navigable container has the lowest priority because containers such as MDDPanel, TabbedPanel, and FSMWizard don't normally have a help topic ID of their own, since help topics tend to be on a per page basis.
For most cases the recommended approach is to have the Traversable
specify the help ID. However, when the same Traversable can be
used in different contexts, then specifying or overriding the help
ID from the MetaTraversable could be better, especially if that
avoids the need for conditional logic in Traversable.getHelpID().
If no dynamic behavior is needed in determining the help ID, then
the implementation can probably just subclass DefaultTraversablePanel and call the DefaultTraversablePanel.setHelpID(String) method from the
subclass constructor.
The getHelpID() method is called only when the user requests help, so the actual help ID may be determined dynamically (e.g. return a different ID depending on the state of the UI).
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Oracle Fusion Middleware Java API Reference for Oracle Extension SDK Reference 11g Release 1 (11.1.1.4.0) E13403-05 |
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