Features

Labels
AJAX(112) App Studio(8) Apple(1) Application Builder(245) Application Factory(207) ASP.NET(95) ASP.NET 3.5(45) ASP.NET Code Generator(72) ASP.NET Membership(28) Azure(18) Barcode(2) Barcodes(3) BLOB(18) Business Rules(1) Business Rules/Logic(140) BYOD(13) Caching(2) Calendar(5) Charts(29) Cloud(14) Cloud On Time(2) Cloud On Time for Windows 7(2) Code Generator(54) Collaboration(11) command line(1) Conflict Detection(1) Content Management System(12) COT Tools for Excel(26) CRUD(1) Custom Actions(1) Data Aquarium Framework(122) Data Sheet(9) Data Sources(22) Database Lookups(50) Deployment(22) Designer(177) Device(1) DotNetNuke(12) EASE(20) Email(6) Features(101) Firebird(1) Form Builder(14) Globalization and Localization(6) How To(1) Hypermedia(2) Inline Editing(1) Installation(5) JavaScript(20) Kiosk(1) Low Code(3) Mac(1) Many-To-Many(4) Maps(6) Master/Detail(36) Microservices(4) Mobile(63) Mode Builder(3) Model Builder(3) MySQL(10) Native Apps(5) News(18) OAuth(9) OAuth Scopes(1) OAuth2(13) Offline(20) Offline Apps(4) Offline Sync(5) Oracle(11) PKCE(2) Postgre SQL(1) PostgreSQL(2) PWA(2) QR codes(2) Rapid Application Development(5) Reading Pane(2) Release Notes(184) Reports(48) REST(29) RESTful(29) RESTful Workshop(15) RFID tags(1) SaaS(7) Security(81) SharePoint(12) SPA(6) SQL Anywhere(3) SQL Server(26) SSO(1) Stored Procedure(4) Teamwork(15) Tips and Tricks(87) Tools for Excel(2) Touch UI(93) Transactions(5) Tutorials(183) Universal Windows Platform(3) User Interface(338) Video Tutorial(37) Web 2.0(100) Web App Generator(101) Web Application Generator(607) Web Form Builder(40) Web.Config(9) Workflow(28)
Archive
Blog
Features
Friday, July 30, 2021PrintSubscribe
Drag, Cut, Copy, and Paste Your Data

Clipboard is an indispensable tool if you are composing an email, creating a document, or writing code. “Cut and paste” helps us to rearrange our thoughts. “Copy and paste” comes handy when we are out of ideas.

An input field in a custom business app provides instant access to the system clipboard when editing a value. A selected fragment of text can be dragged and dropped into a new position. App users work with the collections of data items. A data item represents a group of related fields. Wouldn't it be great to take advantage of the clipboard and drag & drop to copy or move the items between or within the data collections?

Clipboard and Drag & Drop With Structured Data

The clipboard commands and drag & drop can benefit a business app when applied to the structured data. Consider the Order Management Dashboard presented below. 

You can see the end user dragging the product from the menu and dropping it directly on the list of details of the selected order. The product Boston Crab Meat is semi-transparent in the menu of 77 products while it is being dragged. The “drop” frame outlines the Order Details as a target accepting the product. The mouse pointer is displayed as the “copy” arrow. The tooltip with the name of the dragged item is shown next to the pointer.

 

The result of the product “drop” is shown next. The product is no longer visible in the menu of 76 products presented on the right-hand side of the dashboard. The dropped product is now linked to the selected order. It is visible in the list of details. The “drop” frame has disappeared.

The following screenshot shows the state of the dashboard just moments after the user has started dragging the product. The list of details is still empty. The mouse pointer is a no-drop icon indicating that the drop is not accepted in the current position. The “drop” frame will appear when the pointer is over the list of details.

 

 
The end user can select the Copy command from the context menu of a product. The “drag indicator” doubles as the “more” menu when tapped or clicked. The command is also visible on the toolbar of the Products grid.

 
Here is the result of the Paste command executed three times on the Order Details. The product Aniseed Syrup has disappeared from the menu of products, which is now reduced to 75 items. The product is visible in the list of order details with the quantity set to 3. The Paste command on the toolbar of the details shows the tooltip with the description of the copied item and its source.

 
This application also enables the drag & drop capabilities for the Shippers. It may be useful when implementing the rearranging of items. 

The “drag indicator” icon is shown in each row next to the values in the first column of the grid. It replaces the standard “more” icon. The mouse pointer switches to the “grab” style when hovering over the icon. It prompts the end user that the corresponding item can be dragged.


Dragging of the item will switch the pointer to “no-drop” when dragging over the targets that do not accept the drop. The dragged item is semi-transparent and the tooltip next to the system pointer explains what is being dragged.


The list of shippers is configured to accept the drop of its own items. The mouse pointer style is “move” when hovering over the items in the same list. 


Dragging to the other user interface elements of the Shippers grid will cause the entire list to become the “drop” target.

 

Cut/Copy/Paste and Drag & Drop in Touch UI

Touch UI provides the built-in data clipboard with the persistent state. System actions Cut/Copy/Paste and item dragging is enabled in the app with the simple tagging of the corresponding data views. Commands CutPaste, CopyPaste, and DragDrop are automatically executed by the framework in response to the user actions. Developers can create custom JavaScript, SQL, and Code business rules responding to the commands. The command argument indicates the name of the source data controller. Developers have access to the target row of the command and the row that was cut, copied, or dragged. The source row fields are prefixed with the name of the source data controller. There is no built-in processing for the commands and their interpretation and security is left up to the application developers. If multiple items were copied, cut, or dropped, then the corresponding command is executed for each item in the context of the transaction. The successful execution of the command for all items will result in the automatic commit. An error will rollback the effect of CutPaste, CopyPaste, and DragDrop for all items. Clipboard objects created with Cut and Copy commands are available to all pages of the application. This makes it possible to offer a comprehensive clipboard experience with the structured data. The clipboard contents remain persisted until the next Cut/Copy is executed by the user. This enables pasting the same data multiple times. Developers may opt to clear the clipboard after each CutPaste or CopyPaste command when needed. The unique unified data processing of Touch UI allows creating a consistent clipboard and drag & drop experience for the structured data. Let’s learn how to build this Order Management Dashboard.
 

Dashboard Configuration

Begin by creating a new project with Code On Time. Connect to the instance of the Northwind database. Create the following models with the default settings: Orders, Customers, Employees, Shippers, OrderDetails, Categories, Products, and Suppliers. Optionally configure the orders to sort by dates with the most recent ones at the top. Activate the project designer and create the new custom data controller with the name Dashboard1. This controller is not based on any data model. Select Orders, OrderDetails, and Products controllers with Ctrl+click and choose Copy in the context menu of either one of them. Right-click the Dashboard1 controller and choose Paste. This will create the corresponding DataView fields. Set the Filter Source of OrderDetails field to Orders and Filter Field #1 to Order ID. This will enable the master-detail relationship between the Orders and the Details in the dashboard. If the order is selected, then the details will be filtered to show the linked items. Set the Filter Source property of the Products field to Orders but do not select any filter fields. The product menu will behave as any other detail in the master-detail relationship. It will hide if there is no order selected in the dashboard. It will show up and refresh when the order selection has changed. The server-side code will also have access to the primary key of the order. Create the view form1, set its type to Form, the label to Order Manager, and tag it as material-icon-category. Create two categories in the form1. Set the flow of both categories to New Column. Rename the categories by selecting the corresponding command in the context menu to orders and products. Drag the Orders and OrderDetails fields to the first category. Set the Page Size of the Orders data field to 3. Also set its Auto Highlight First Row to Yes. This will ensure that only the three most recent orders are visible with the first one selected when the dashboard is loaded. Next set the Page Size of the OrderDetails data field to 25. Drag the Products field to the second category and set the Page Size of the created data field to 7. The Dashboard1 data controller will look like this in the Project Designer on the Controllers tab.
 


Now it is time to configure the Cut/Copy/Paste and Drag & Drop. Tag the Dashboard1 / views / form1 / orders / OrderDetails data field as shown below to enable the pasting and dropping of Products into Order Details

item-paste-Products item-drop-Products
Tag the Dashboard1 / views / form1 / products / Products data field with the following tags to enable Cut, Copy, and dragging of Products:

item-cut item-copy item-drag myapp-product-menu
The custom tag myapp-product-menu will be used later when filtering the product menu. Create the page called Dashboard and drag it after the Home page. Copy and paste the data controller Dashboard1 onto the page. Set its property Show Action Buttons to None. Enter Wide in the Icon / Custom Style property to remove the sidebar on the page. The visual configuration of the dashboard is now complete!
 

Implementing Paste and Drop

Commands CopyPaste, CutPaste, and DragDrop are executed on the OrderDetails data controller when the user pastes the previously cut or copied product or drags and drops one from the product menu onto the view. We will create a single SQL business rule to handle all of these situations. Our objective is to insert or update a record in the Order Details table.


 
Create a new SQL business rule in the OrderDetails data controller. Set its phase to Execute and its Command Name to CutPaste|CopyPaste|DragDrop regular expression. Enter the following script:
 


The business rule is triggered when the command with the name matching the regular expression is detected by the app framework on the server. 

The SQL script will attempt to increment the Quantity column of the existing [Order Details] row with the product ID matching the parameter @Products_ProductID. This parameter is supplied by Touch UI and its value is set to the dragged, cut, or copied ProductID. Note that it is possible to access any other property of the product by specifying the name of the data controller as a prefix separated with the underscore character from the field name.

Touch UI also supplies the value of the parameter @OrderID. It is set to the value of the OrderDetails.OrderID field in the “drop” or “paste” target item. If the target is the entire Order Details view then the field values are set to NULL with the exception of the fields specified in the Filter Fields property. The values of these fields are borrowed from the selected master row. The business rule has the value of the selected OrderID regardless of the drop or paste target.

If no rows have changed after UPDATE then the SQL business rule will INSERT an order detail with the same product and order identifiers with the quantity of 1.

Filtering Items in the Product Menu 

Let’s make it so that the product menu in the dashboard is empty unless an order is selected. 

Choose the Products data controller in the Project Designer and set its Handler property to ProductsBusinessRules. Browse the app to generate the placeholder file ~/app/App_Code/custom/Rules/Products/ProductBusinessRules.cs. Right-click the controller and choose Edit Handler in Visual Studio.

Enter the following code:
 

 
Method EnumerateDynamicAccessControlRules will impose the access control restrictions when the app is retrieving the data for grid1 view of the Products tagged as myapp-product-menu. This is exactly how the product menu is configured in the dashboard. The name Orders specified in the Filter Source property of the data view field Products is ensuring that the order ID selected in the dashboard is available under the “Orders” alias to the business rules.

If the order ID is not available, then our list of products will be limited to those with the primary key set to -1. Such products do not exist and therefore the user will see the empty list of products.

Otherwise we will deny access to the products that are already linked to the details of the selected order. Such products will not be visible in the product menu.

Trying It Out

Run the app and try populating order details with Cut/Copy/Paste and Drag & Drop. You will notice that the product menu gets shorter as more details are created in the selected order. The framework automatically syncs the details and the product menu with the server after each successful CutPaste, CopyPaste, or DragDrop command.

If you insert a new detail with the help of the New command or delete a few details from the order then the product menu will become out of sync. The selected order is not changed if you perform these operations. The menu will have to be refreshed manually. 

Copy and Cut commands move data to the app clipboard. The data remains there even when you refresh the page or restart the browser and sign in with the user identity. You may want to clear the clipboard after each Paste. 

Paste and Drop do not display a confirmation message and execute instantly. There may be circumstances when the user assent is required.

JavaScript Business Rules

Let’s perfect the syncing of the product menu and provide some pre and post processing when products are pasted or dropped onto the order details.

Create the file ~/app/js/dragdrop.js with the following code. It declares the syncProductMenu() function and the custom client-side business rules for OrderDetails.


The function syncProductMenu()  will locate the product menu on the dashboard and request it to sync once. The default ID of the Dashboard1 data controller instance is view1. The name of the dataview field Products is specified as the argument of syncOnce method. This method will wait for the user interface to stop being busy and sync the data. Subsequent calls to syncOnce will cancel the previous requests to avoid redundant calls. Use this method whenever a dataview on the page requires a data refresh.

The business rule responding to the CopyPaste command will interrupt the execution and display a confirmation. The method $app.confirm returns a promise to the framework. Touch UI will proceed to execute the command if the promise is resolved, which happens when the user agrees to proceed by pressing the OK button in the confirmation prompt. 

The post-processing will sync the product menu after the details are inserted or deleted.

If the copy CopyPaste command has completed successfully, then a custom confirmation with the text describing the clipboard contents is displayed.

The command CutPaste is followed by the clearing of the clipboard.

Advanced Techniques

The default scope of the app clipboard is “global”. Data placed in the clipboard is available on all pages of the app to Paste. You can limit the scope of the clipboard to the current page by setting the option clipboard.scope to “local” in ~/app/touch-settings.json file.

Tags item-paste-Controller and item-drop-Controller make it possible for the user to target individual items in the data view. End users can also paste and drop data by targeting the entire view. There will be situations where the items shall not become the target. Tag view-paste-Controller will make it possible to paste only through the context menu of the dataview. Tag view-drop-Controller will cause the drop target to extend to the entire view when its item is target. 

Cut/Copy/Paste and Drag & Drop are relying on the clipboard to accumulate and perform execution of the CutPaste, CopyPaste, and DragDrop commands. There is no default interpretation for these commands. If your app is relying on the Offline Data Processor to allow transaction input of master-detail records, then the server-side execution of these commands makes little sense. The master-detail data is accumulated and staged by the ODP directly in the WebView. Only the saving of the master record will cause the transaction to be executed on the client. If you want to support the data clipboard and drag & drop with ODP then you will need to write a custom interpretation of the commands in JavaScript.

The live app https://demo.codeontime.com allows cutting and pasting products between supplier and category masters. ODP is enabled on the Categories and Products pages, since their Offline property is set to yes.  ODP is enabled in the "offline" pages loaded in the web browser and also in the disconnected mode when the app is hosted in Cloud On Time. following script implements a custom CutPaste and CopyPaste, which will replace the category or the supplier of the pasted product.


Conclusion

The dashboard can be further enhanced to allow dragging and dropping the order details onto the product menu to provide an alternative method to delete the details.

If the order detail is dropped onto another order, then the detail product can be moved between orders.

The dedicated Products page can provide the Copy and Cut commands. The pasting of the products into Order Details will automatically work on the dashboard page since the clipboard contents are persisted.

If the items in the dataview have a sequential order, then tagging the dataview as item-drag item-drop-Controller will enable the drag & drop movement of items. Use the physical name of the data controller instead of “Controller” in the tag. Implement the business rule to change the item indexes in the response to the DragDrop command.

The consistent user interface of Touch UI makes it possible to create amazing apps with spectacular results that are impossible to achieve with any other tool.

Tuesday, March 30, 2021PrintSubscribe
Icons, Icons, Icons

 Material Icons and 3rd Party Icon Fonts

Touch UI gets its good looks from the Material Icons library designed by Google. Apps based on Touch UI feel at home on the Android devices and Chromebooks. They look crisp and professional on iOS, Mac, and Windows.

Touch UI apps support several build-in icon styles and can be extended to use the 3rd party icon collections. 

There are four different styles of icons that help your app to stand out - filled, outlined, rounded, and sharp. The default style filled can be changed by setting the value to ui.theme.icons property in ~/touch-settings.json configuration file. 


The built-in icons come from the web fonts stored under the ~/fonts folder of your application. 

Configuring 3rd Party Icon Fonts

Touch UI makes it easy to integrate additional icon libraries in the application. The following configuration in the ~/touch-settings.json file will set the built-in icon font to the outlined style and link the icon collections called Font Awesome and Material Design Icons. The former offers the popular set of free and commercial icons. The latter is the community-driven effort not affiliated with Google, but bearing a similar name.


Please note that the Font Awesome URL is provided for illustrative purposes only. The vendor requires registration via email. Sign up and you will receive an email with the JavaScript snippet that will hook the web font to your pages. Use the script filename in the ui.iconFonts.fa.url property but keep the “*.css” extension as shown above.

The prefixes “fa” and “mdi” are not accidental. Review the documentation of the web font provider and take a notice of the prefix used in the example. Use the same prefix when registering the font in your app. It is the industry standard to prefix the icon names with the same sequence of characters. The cascading style sheets linked to the app will have the corresponding definitions with the references to the icon font family. 

Touch UI will create dynamic CSS rules at runtime to make the 3rd party icons match the width and height of the built-in icons. Specify a numeric “size” property for the prefix defined in ui.theme.iconFonts if the icons appear to be larger or smaller than the standard icons of Touch UI. The default size of the icons is 24 pixels.

Using Icons in the Application


Let’s apply the standard icon shopping_cart  to the editForm1 view in the Products data controller. Open your app in the Project Designer, find the view, and enter material-icon-shopping-cart in the Tags property.


This will enhance your form with the corresponding icon in the header. The icon is over-imposed on the larger self visible partially in the background for an added artistic touch.


Clear the tag on the view editForm1 and enter the fa-shopping-basket to activate the shopping basket icon from the Font Awesome library.


Here is what happens if you tag the editForm1 view with the mdi-basket and engage the Material Design Icons library.


Assign icons to actions and pages by entering the icon name in their Icon / Custom Style property. For example, icons fa-truck and fa-coffee are assigned to the Shippers page and custom action Take a Break in the screenshots. The icons will show on the sidebar, in the navigation tabs, and in the menu options.


Embedding Icon Fonts in Apps

If you plan to run your app in the native mode or prefer not to have the external dependencies, then consider embedding the stylesheets and fonts directly in the app folders. 

Run the app in the web browser and bring up its Web Inspector. Disable caching on the Network tab and refresh the page. You will find the external references to the CSS stylesheets and the web fonts listed in the traffic. Save them in a dedicated folder under ~/css directory of your app. 

Next remove the “url” property from the prefix under ui.iconFonts in ~/touch-settings.json. Keep the prefix even if it is empty. Run the app and make sure that only the local references appear in the network traffic of the browser. The CSS files will be loaded automatically, but you may need to manipulate the relative references to the web fonts in the CSS files if icons do not show up.

Saturday, March 27, 2021PrintSubscribe
Navigation Menu

Apps created with Touch UI have three options for the placement for the navigation menu. By default the top-level items of the navigation hierarchy are displayed as tabs in the toolbar. Menu items with children will have a dropdown menu. The spill-over items are moved under “More” menu item created automatically as needed.


Developers may choose to move the menu to the sidebar displayed on the left side of the app. The space in the sidebar is at the premium and the complex menus will be collapsed with the current node expanded. The sublevels of the menu can be individually expanded and collapsed. The same collapsible menu is also displayed when the Apps button is pressed. It is also visible in the hamburger menu and on the small screens.


Enter the following in ~/touch-settings.json to move the menu to the sidebar and to relocate the Apps button next to the user profile icon on the toolbar. 


The Apps button is the icon represented with 3 x 3 solid squares or circles. You will find it in the sidebar, on the toolbar, or in the hamburger menu of your app. Its purpose is to provide quick access to the most important pages of the app and to the full navigation menu.

Assign a dedicated icon to a page by entering the icon name in the Icon / Custom Style property of the page in the Project Designer .The  extensive Material Icons library is included with the framework. The name of the icon can be entered with the material-icon- prefix (e.g. material-icon-emoji-people).The icons will be displayed in the sidebar, in the context menu options, and in the drop down menus of the app toolbar. The top-level items will not have the  icons in the menu with the default placement.

Up to five icons are visible in the mini sidebar and the full set is presented in the context panel activated with the Apps button. The More option in the context panel will show the complete navigation menu.


If at least two pages have a dedicated icon, then the app will display the tabs at the bottom of the screen when the sidebar is hidden. The spill-over icons will migrate to the More tab.


The hamburger menu will display the full navigation menu.


Developers may opt to hide the navigation menu from the toolbar and the sidebar by setting ui.menu.location to none in ~/touch-settings.json for a minimalist look and feel. The navigation menu will still be available through the Apps button and the hamburger menu.

The state of nodes in the navigation menu with the vertical layout is controlled by ui.menu.autoExpand property. The default value is current, which will expand one level of the menu node representing the current page. Setting this option to false will keep the current node collapsed. The all value will have all items fully expanded when the navigation menu is rendered vertically.

Touch UI completely automates the navigation menu presentation while letting the developer focus on what’s important.

Continue to Lines, Lines, Lines