Here’s a bit of undocumented goodness. In this tutorial we’ll set up an ExtJS 4 button to act just like a link that pops up in new window:
<a href="..." target="_blank"/> |
Here’s a bit of undocumented goodness. In this tutorial we’ll set up an ExtJS 4 button to act just like a link that pops up in new window:
<a href="..." target="_blank"/> |
Read Previous Example First!
In this example, we’ll improve our ExtJS 4 model to include an “association” that it will read from XML produced by AJAX call to ASP.NET. Most common association is one to many, for example: your Client can place multiple Orders. An ExtJS 4 data store and model can accommodate this.
The new XML data packet will look like this; notice hiddenAttributes:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <matches> <match> <id>0</id> <name>Number 0</name> <hiddenAttributes> <attr> <name>hidden1</name> <value>val1</value> </attr> <attr> <name>hidden2</name> <value>val2</value> </attr> </hiddenAttributes> </match> <match><id>1</id><name>Number 1</name></match> ... </matches> |
Read Previous Example First!
In this example, we’ll be returning additional data to our ExtJS4 data store, which is passed from ASP.NET over AJAX in XML format. It’s common to show grid row count in the form title, as well as something else in the header, such as final SQL or LDAP query used by your ASP.NET AJAX script (WebMethod).
Combine this with ExtJS4 buffered grid’s ability to only render 50 HTML rows with infinite scrolling, this makes the stock ExtJS4 gridpanel an extremely powerful application in its own right, very good at running large data queries. On a decent computer with decent Internet connection this will smoke the traditional buffered grid, which ajax back on every scroll.
In this example series we’ll keep using MSAjaxProxy we set up earlier, for working with IIS 6+ running MS AJAX Extensions 1.0
In this example we’ll set up an ExtJS4 gridpanel with infinite scrolling, using XML data served from ASP.NET. Sometimes this is also called “buffered grid.” Sencha provides an example using memory store, but it took me some time to figure this one out, so enjoy!
In this example series we’ll keep using MSAjaxProxy we set up earlier, for working with IIS 6+ running MS AJAX Extensions 1.0
We’ll set up an ExtJS4 gridpanel with infinite scrolling, using XML data served from ASP.NET. This is a native feature of ExtJS4, but I have not seen a single example from Sencha, explaining how to do this with a real proxy. It is a great feature though, as you can have a 100,000 record data set, with only 50 HTML table rows on the screen at any given time.
ExtJS4 Store & Model configuration is trivial:
// Model Ext.define('MyOrg.model.SearchResult', { extend: 'Ext.data.Model' , fields: ['id','name'] }); // Store Ext.create('Ext.data.Store',{ model: 'MyOrg.model.SearchResult' , proxy: Ext.create('MyOrg.proxy.MSAjaxProxy', { url: 'Default-UMRA.aspx/Search' , reader: { type: 'xml', root: 'matches', record: 'match' } , extraParams: { query: 'Param to C#' } }) // eo proxy }) |