/*! * Ext JS Library 3.2.0 * Copyright(c) 2006-2010 Ext JS, Inc. * licensing@extjs.com * http://www.extjs.com/license */ /** * @class Ext.layout.CardLayout * @extends Ext.layout.FitLayout *This layout manages multiple child Components, each fitted to the Container, where only a single child Component can be * visible at any given time. This layout style is most commonly used for wizards, tab implementations, etc. * This class is intended to be extended or created via the layout:'card' {@link Ext.Container#layout} config, * and should generally not need to be created directly via the new keyword.
*The CardLayout's focal method is {@link #setActiveItem}. Since only one panel is displayed at a time, * the only way to move from one Component to the next is by calling setActiveItem, passing the id or index of * the next panel to display. The layout itself does not provide a user interface for handling this navigation, * so that functionality must be provided by the developer.
*In the following example, a simplistic wizard setup is demonstrated. A button bar is added * to the footer of the containing panel to provide navigation buttons. The buttons will be handled by a * common navigation routine -- for this example, the implementation of that routine has been ommitted since * it can be any type of custom logic. Note that other uses of a CardLayout (like a tab control) would require a * completely different implementation. For serious implementations, a better approach would be to extend * CardLayout to provide the custom functionality needed. Example usage:
**/ Ext.layout.CardLayout = Ext.extend(Ext.layout.FitLayout, { /** * @cfg {Boolean} deferredRender * True to render each contained item at the time it becomes active, false to render all contained items * as soon as the layout is rendered (defaults to false). If there is a significant amount of content or * a lot of heavy controls being rendered into panels that are not displayed by default, setting this to * true might improve performance. */ deferredRender : false, /** * @cfg {Boolean} layoutOnCardChange * True to force a layout of the active item when the active card is changed. Defaults to false. */ layoutOnCardChange : false, /** * @cfg {Boolean} renderHidden @hide */ // private renderHidden : true, type: 'card', /** * Sets the active (visible) item in the layout. * @param {String/Number} item The string component id or numeric index of the item to activate */ setActiveItem : function(item){ var ai = this.activeItem, ct = this.container; item = ct.getComponent(item); // Is this a valid, different card? if(item && ai != item){ // Changing cards, hide the current one if(ai){ ai.hide(); if (ai.hidden !== true) { return false; } ai.fireEvent('deactivate', ai); } var layout = item.doLayout && (this.layoutOnCardChange || !item.rendered); // Change activeItem reference this.activeItem = item; // The container is about to get a recursive layout, remove any deferLayout reference // because it will trigger a redundant layout. delete item.deferLayout; // Show the new component item.show(); this.layout(); if(layout){ item.doLayout(); } item.fireEvent('activate', item); } }, // private renderAll : function(ct, target){ if(this.deferredRender){ this.renderItem(this.activeItem, undefined, target); }else{ Ext.layout.CardLayout.superclass.renderAll.call(this, ct, target); } } }); Ext.Container.LAYOUTS['card'] = Ext.layout.CardLayout;var navHandler = function(direction){ // This routine could contain business logic required to manage the navigation steps. // It would call setActiveItem as needed, manage navigation button state, handle any // branching logic that might be required, handle alternate actions like cancellation // or finalization, etc. A complete wizard implementation could get pretty // sophisticated depending on the complexity required, and should probably be // done as a subclass of CardLayout in a real-world implementation. }; var card = new Ext.Panel({ title: 'Example Wizard', layout:'card', activeItem: 0, // make sure the active item is set on the container config! bodyStyle: 'padding:15px', defaults: { // applied to each contained panel border:false }, // just an example of one possible navigation scheme, using buttons bbar: [ { id: 'move-prev', text: 'Back', handler: navHandler.createDelegate(this, [-1]), disabled: true }, '->', // greedy spacer so that the buttons are aligned to each side { id: 'move-next', text: 'Next', handler: navHandler.createDelegate(this, [1]) } ], // the panels (or "cards") within the layout items: [{ id: 'card-0', html: '<h1>Welcome to the Wizard!</h1><p>Step 1 of 3</p>' },{ id: 'card-1', html: '<p>Step 2 of 3</p>' },{ id: 'card-2', html: '<h1>Congratulations!</h1><p>Step 3 of 3 - Complete</p>' }] });