Blog: Posts from August, 2008

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Posts from August, 2008
Sunday, August 10, 2008PrintSubscribe
Presenting Multiple Views of the Same Data

Ability to see multiple views of the same data is an invaluable tool for the end users of your applications. It provides increased productive due the reduced time spent while searching for data.

Let's generate a Data Aquarium Framework application from the Northwind database and research the multiple view presentation capabilities of the framework. If you run the application and select Customers option from the drop down at top of the page then the following view of customers is displayed.

image

At the right side of the blue tool bar above the grid you can see the orange view selector that shows Customers in it. You can expand the list of views to provide alternative presentation of data without any coding.

Suppose you want to display phone and fax information on screen and don't really care if the customer ID is available. Open the ~/Controllers/Customers.xml data controller descriptor file in Visual Studio 2008 and add the following markup in the views section:

    <view id="grid2" type="Grid" commandId="command1" label="Phone/Fax">
      <headerText>List of customers with phone and fax. </headerText>
      <dataFields>
        <dataField fieldName="CompanyName" columns="40" />
        <dataField fieldName="Phone" columns="24" />
        <dataField fieldName="Fax" columns="24" />
        <dataField fieldName="Country" columns="15" />
        <dataField fieldName="ContactName" columns="30" />
        <dataField fieldName="ContactTitle" columns="30" />
      </dataFields>
    </view>

This is how the data will be presented if you refresh the page and select the name of the new view in the view selector. Notice that each view maintains its own sorting, adaptive filtering, and current page when you switch from one view to another.

image

You may also provide an alternative query to produce data displayed in the view. Imagine that you want to have a quick way to list all customers from United States of America. You will need to define the following command in commands section of the data controller:

    <command id="command2" type="Text">
      <text>
        <![CDATA[
select
    "Customers"."CustomerID" "CustomerID"
    ,"Customers"."CompanyName" "CompanyName"
    ,"Customers"."ContactName" "ContactName"
    ,"Customers"."ContactTitle" "ContactTitle"
    ,"Customers"."Address" "Address"
    ,"Customers"."City" "City"
    ,"Customers"."Region" "Region"
    ,"Customers"."PostalCode" "PostalCode"
    ,"Customers"."Country" "Country"
    ,"Customers"."Phone" "Phone"
    ,"Customers"."Fax" "Fax"
from "dbo"."Customers" "Customers"
where
  "Customers"."Country"='USA'
]]>
      </text>
    </command>

Also add the following view in the views section:

    <view id="grid3" type="Grid" commandId="command2" label="USA Customers">
      <headerText>List of customers from United States of America. </headerText>
      <dataFields>
        <dataField fieldName="CompanyName" columns="40" />
        <dataField fieldName="ContactName" columns="30" />
        <dataField fieldName="ContactTitle" columns="30" />
        <dataField fieldName="Address" />
        <dataField fieldName="City" columns="15" />
        <dataField fieldName="Region" columns="15" />
        <dataField fieldName="PostalCode" columns="10" />
        <dataField fieldName="Phone" columns="24" />
      </dataFields>
    </view>

View grid3 is referring to command2 in the commandId attribute of the view element.

The following presentation will be available to application users from now on. Independent sorting, paging, and current page are automatically maintained for this view as well.

image

Notice that all views are instantly available in any data lookups that are referring to Customers data controller. Verify that by navigating to the orders screen. Select any order and edit the record. Click on the Customer Company Name link and try selecting the views that we have defined.

image

Data Aquarium Framework provides unparalleled ease and flexibility in defining custom presentation views of your data.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008PrintSubscribe
Using "roles" and "writeRoles" Attributes with Fields and Actions

Data Aquarium Framework allows controlling user access to the fields and actions defined by data controller based on user roles. The standard ASP.NET security infrastructure is being utilized to determine the role of the current user. You must enable any form of authentication supported by ASP.NET to be able to use this features.

Element “field” in the “/dataController/fields” section has attributes “roles” and “writeRoles”. The first attribute specifies a space- or comma-separated list of roles allowed to read the field. If “roles” element is not present or defined as a blank string then any user is allowed to see the field presented in the views. If “roles” attribute is not blank then a call

HttpContext.Current.User.IsInRole(role)

is executed by the framework to see if the field should be visible in the presentation views defined in the data controller XML file.

Attribute “writeRoles” specifies the roles that user must have in order to be able to change the field content.

Element “action” of any “/dataController/actions/actionGroup” section allows specifying user roles that are allowed to execute that action. If the attribute is not present or blank then the action is available to everyone. If a space- or comma-separated list is present then the framework will ask ASP.NET to see if the user does have one of this roles before this action is allowed to be displayed and executed in the views defined in the data controller file.

Notice that the same action may be defined in multiple actions group. For example, the standard generated definition of the data controller will have “Delete” action defined twice in the action group with scope “Grid” and twice in the action group with scope “Form”. You have to make sure that the same list of roles allowed to execute the “Delete” action is duplicated in all four instances.

Let’s try the real example. This example assumes that you do have SQL Server 2005 Express Edition installed on your development machine.

Generate a Data Aquarium project for the Northwind database. Open the web site with Visual Studio 2008 or Visual Web Developer Express 2008 and add a form named Login.aspx to the root of the new web site. Switch this form to design mode and drop Login control on the form. Save the form. Here is the snippet of your from text with the Login control in it.

<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
<head runat="server">
    <title>Untitled Page</title>
</head>
<body>
    <form id="form1" runat="server">
    <div>
    <asp:Login ID=Login1 runat=server></asp:Login>
    </div>
    </form>
</body>
</html>

Select “Website ASP.NET Configuration” menu option in Visual Studio and enable security for our sample application. Indicate that your users are visiting your site from Internet. Specify that you want to enable roles. Create two roles named Admin and User. Create two user accounts, one for each role, and make sure to memorize their user names and password. Create an access rule that denies anonymous user access to the root of your web site. The configuration tool will automatically insert the needed settings in to the web.config file of the sample application will create App_Data project folder with ASP.NET Membership database in it.

Start default.aspx page. You will be asked to sign in. Make sure that you can sign in with one of the user accounts that you have created. When sign in successfully the default page will display the views defined in the ~/Controllers/Employees.xml data controller configuration file. Close the browser and open that data controller file in Visual Studio.

Make the following changed in the definition of LastName, FirstName, and Title fields.

    <field name="LastName" type="String" allowNulls="false" label="Last Name"  writeRoles="Admin"/>
    <field name="FirstName" type="String" allowNulls="false" label="First Name" writeRoles="Admin"/>
    <field name="Title" type="String" label="Title"  roles="Admin"/>

Run the application a few times while singing in with different user accounts that you have created. Notice that when you sign with account that has User role then Title field is not visible in any of the presentation views. User with Admin can see the Title field at all times.

Fields LastName and FirstName are accessible to the user with role User but this field is always read-only whenever you switch to any of the edit or insert views.

Now change the action groups to have roles attribute for command Select, Edit, and Delete as shown below.

    <actionGroup scope="Grid">
      <action commandName="Select" commandArgument="editForm1" roles="Admin,User" />
      <action commandName="Edit"  roles="Admin"/>
      <action commandName="Delete" confirmation="Delete?" roles="Admin"/>
      <action whenLastCommandName="Edit" commandName="Update" headerText="Save" />
      <action whenLastCommandName="Edit" commandName="Cancel" />
    </actionGroup>
    <actionGroup scope="Form">
      <action commandName="Edit" />
      <action commandName="Delete" confirmation="Delete?"  roles="Admin"/>
      <action commandName="Cancel" headerText="Close" />
      <action whenLastCommandName="Edit" commandName="Update" headerText="OK" />
      <action whenLastCommandName="Edit" commandName="Delete" confirmation="Delete?" roles="Admin"/>
      <action whenLastCommandName="Edit" commandName="Cancel" />
      <action whenLastCommandName="New" commandName="Insert" headerText="OK" />
      <action whenLastCommandName="New" commandName="Cancel" />
    </actionGroup>

User with administrative accounts will see no difference in the presentation views. User with role User will only Select option in the context menu of the data row in the grid view of employees. Delete action will not be allowed to that user in the form views as well.

As you can see there are plenty of declarative options to control security in the AJAX-enabled user interface without actually writing a single line of code. Any web form that is using your data controller will automatically inherit all security settings, which makes application maintenance a snap.

Sunday, August 3, 2008PrintSubscribe
Database Lookups and Data Aquarium Framework Updates

The latest updates of code generator projects include standard project Database Lookups for ASP.NET and AJAX 3.5 and premium project Data Aquarium Framework.

Database Lookups project has been changed to make SelectedValue property a default property of the control. Java script components were updated to eliminate the problem with the loss of focus in a web form when a data lookup window has been closed. DataViewLookup control will now work without script errors when included in the content template of UpdatePanel control.

Data Aquarium Framework has been updated to include the same fixes described above. Addition components are now generated to make integration of the framework with existing ASP.NET applications a snap. Component ControllerDataSource has been introduced to tap into the power of Data Aquarium Framework to generate dynamic SQL statements on the fly. Now you can connect your existing data views, including GridView, DetailView, and FormView, to this data source control and gain instant ability to page and sort through thousands of records, and provide sophisticated filtering capabilities to end users. Use any commercial web control library that supports standard data binding with Data Aquarium Framework. New control DataViewTextBox is based on the standard TextBox and provides no-code database auto complete for your web forms.

See a demo application that showcases the latest features at http://dev.codeontime.com/demo/integration.

Download the source code of the sample page here.