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|
---
title: Grid
order: 24
layout: page
---
[[components.grid]]
= [classname]#Grid#
*_This section has not yet been updated for Vaadin Framework 8_*
ifdef::web[]
[.sampler]
image:{live-demo-image}[alt="Live Demo", link="http://demo.vaadin.com/sampler/#ui/grids-and-trees/grid"]
endif::web[]
[[components.grid.overview]]
== Overview
[classname]#Grid# is for displaying and editing tabular data laid out in rows
and columns. At the top, a __header__ can be shown, and a __footer__ at the
bottom. In addition to plain text, the header and footer can contain HTML and
components. Having components in the header allows implementing filtering
easily. The grid data can be sorted by clicking on a column header;
shift-clicking a column header enables secondary sorting criteria.
[[figure.components.grid.features]]
.A [classname]#Grid#
image::img/grid-features.png[width=70%, scaledwidth=100%]
The data area can be scrolled both vertically and horizontally. The leftmost
columns can be frozen, so that they are never scrolled out of the view. The data
is loaded lazily from the server, so that only the visible data is loaded. The
smart lazy loading functionality gives excellent user experience even with low
bandwidth, such as mobile devices.
The grid data can be edited with a row-based editor after double-clicking a row.
The fields are set explicitly, and bound to data.
Grid is fully themeable with CSS and style names can be set for all grid
elements. For data rows and cells, the styles can be generated with a row or
cell style generator.
Finally, [classname]#Grid# is designed to be extensible and used just as well
for client-side development - its GWT API is nearly identical to the server-side
API, including data binding.
[[components.grid.data]]
== Binding to Data
[classname]#Grid# is normally used by binding it to a container data source,
described in
<<dummy/../../../framework/datamodel/datamodel-overview.asciidoc#datamodel.overview,"Binding Components to Data">>.
By default, it is bound to List of items. You can set the items in the constructor or with
[methodname]#setItems()# method.
For example, if you have a list of beans, you could add to a [classname]#Grid# as follows
[source, java]
----
// Have some data
List<Person> people = Lists.newArrayList(
new Person("Nicolaus Copernicus", 1543),
new Person("Galileo Galilei", 1564),
new Person("Johannes Kepler", 1571));
// Create a grid bound to the list
Grid<Person> grid = new Grid<>(people);
grid.addColumn("Name", Person::getName);
grid.addColumn("Year of birth", Person::getBirthYear);
layout.addComponent(grid);
----
In addition to list you can pass items individually:
[source, java]
----
grid.setItems(new Person("Nicolaus Copernicus", 1543),
new Person("Galileo Galilei", 1564));
----
Note that you can not use [methodname]#addRow()# to add items if the container
is read-only or has read-only columns, such as generated columns.
[[components.grid.selection]]
== Handling Selection Changes
Selection in [classname]#Grid# is handled a bit differently from other selection
components, as it is not an [classname]#AbstractSelect#. Grid supports both
single and multiple selection, defined by the __selection model__. Selection
events can be handled with a [interfacename]#SelectionListener#.
[[components.grid.selection.mode]]
=== Selection Models
A [classname]#Grid# can be set to be in [literal]#++SINGLE++# (default),
[literal]#++MULTI++#, or [literal]#++NONE++# selection mode, defined in the
[interfacename]#SelectionMode# enum.
[source, java]
----
// Use single-selection mode (default)
grid.setSelectionMode(SelectionMode.SINGLE);
----
Empty (null) selection is allowed by default, but can be disabled
with [methodname]#setDeselectAllowed()# in single-selection mode.
[source, java]
----
// Pre-select 3rd item from the person list
grid.select(personList.get(2));
----
[[components.grid.selection.single]]
=== Handling Selection
Changes in the selection can be handled with a
[interfacename]#SelectionListener#. You need to implement the
[methodname]#select()# method, which gets a [classname]#SelectionEvent# as
parameter. In addition to selection, you can handle clicks on rows or cells with
a [interfacename]#CellClickListener#.
You can get the new selection from the selection event with
[methodname]#getSelected()#, which returns a set of items, or more simply
from the grid.
For example:
[source, java]
----
grid.addSelectionListener(selectionEvent -> {
// Get selection from the selection model
Collection<Person> selectedPersons =
selectionEvent.getSelected();
if (!selectedPersons.isEmpty())
Notification.show("Selected " + selectedPersons);
else
Notification.show("Nothing selected");
});
----
The current selection can be obtained from the [classname]#Grid# object by
[methodname]#getSelectedItem()# or [methodname]#getSelectedItems()#, which return
one (in single-selection mode) or all (in multi-selection mode) selected items.
[WARNING]
====
If you change the data source for a grid, it will clear the selection. To keep
the previous selection you must reset the selection afterwards using the
[methodname]#select()# method.
====
[[components.grid.selection.multi]]
=== Multiple Selection
In the multiple selection mode, a user can select multiple items by clicking on
the checkboxes in the leftmost column, or by using the kbd:[Space] to select/deselect the currently focused row.
Space bar is the default key for toggling the selection, but it can be customized.
[[figure.components.grid.selection.multi]]
.Multiple Selection in [classname]#Grid#
image::img/grid-selection-multi.png[width=50%, scaledwidth=75%]
You can use [methodname]#select()# to add items to the selection.
[source, java]
----
// Grid in multi-selection mode
Grid<Person> grid = Grid<>(personList)
grid.setSelectionMode(SelectionMode.MULTI);
// Items 2-4
personList.subList(2,3).forEach(grid::select);
----
The current selection can be read with [methodname]#getSelected()#
in the [classname]#Grid#.
[source, java]
----
// Allow deleting the selected items
Button delSelected = new Button("Delete Selected", e -> {
// Delete all selected data items
for (Person person: selection.getSelected())
personList.remove(person);
// Disable after deleting
e.getButton().setEnabled(false);
// Reset grid content from the list
grid.setItems(personList);
});
delSelected.setEnabled(!grid.getSelected().isEmpty());
----
Changes in the selection can be handled with a
[interfacename]#SelectionListener#. The selection event object provides
[methodname]#getAdded()# and [methodname]#getRemoved()# to allow determining the
differences in the selection change.
[source, java]
----
// Handle selection changes
grid.addSelectionListener(selection -> { // Java 8
Notification.show(selection.getAdded().size() +
" items added, " +
selection.getRemoved().size() +
" removed.");
// Allow deleting only if there's any selected
deleteSelected.setEnabled(
grid.getSelectedRows().size() > 0);
});
----
[[components.grid.selection.clicks]]
=== Focus and Clicks
In addition to selecting rows, you can focus individual cells. The focus can be
moved with arrow keys and, if editing is enabled, pressing kbd:[Enter] opens the
editor. Normally, pressing kbd:[Tab] or kbd:[Shift+Tab] moves the focus to another component,
as usual.
When editing or in unbuffered mode, kbd:[Tab] or kbd:[Shift+Tab] moves the focus to the next or
previous cell. The focus moves from the last cell of a row forward to the
beginning of the next row, and likewise, from the first cell backward to the
end of the previous row. Note that you can extend [classname]#DefaultEditorEventHandler#
to change this behavior.
With the mouse, you can focus a cell by clicking on it. The clicks can be handled
with an [interfacename]#ItemClickListener#. The [classname]#ItemClickEvent#
object contains various information, most importantly the ID of the clicked row
and column.
[source, java]
----
grid.addCellClickListener(event ->
Notification.show("Value: " + event.getItem());
----
The clicked grid cell is also automatically focused.
The focus indication is themed so that the focused cell has a visible focus
indicator style by default, while the row does not. You can enable row focus, as
well as disable cell focus, in a custom theme. See <<components.grid.css>>.
[[components.grid.columns]]
== Configuring Columns
Columns are normally defined in the container data source. The
[methodname]#addColumn()# method can be used to add columns to [classname]#Grid#.
Column configuration is defined in [classname]#Grid.Column# objects, which can
be obtained from the grid with [methodname]#getColumns()#.
[source, java]
----
Column<Date> bornColumn = grid.addColumn(Person:getBirthDate);
bornColumn.setHeaderCaption("Born date");
----
In the following, we describe the basic column configuration.
[[components.grid.columns.order]]
=== Column Order
You can set the order of columns with [methodname]#setColumnOrder()# for the
grid. Columns that are not given for the method are placed after the specified
columns in their natural order.
[source, java]
----
grid.setColumnOrder(firstnameColumn, lastnameColumn,
bornColumn, birthplaceColumn,
diedColumn);
----
Note that the method can not be used to hide columns. You can hide columns with
the [methodname]#removeColumn()#, as described later.
[[components.grid.columns.removing]]
=== Hiding and Removing Columns
Columns can be hidden by calling [methodname]#setHidden()# in [classname]#Column#.
Furthermore, you can set the columns user hideable using method
[methodname]#setHideable()#.
Columns can be removed with [methodname]#removeColumn()# and
[methodname]#removeAllColumns()#. To restore a previously removed column,
you can call [methodname]#addColumn()#.
[[components.grid.columns.captions]]
=== Column Captions
Column captions are displayed in the grid header. You can set the header caption
explicitly through the column object with [methodname]#setHeaderCaption()#.
[source, java]
----
Column<Date> bornColumn = grid.addColumn(Person:getBirthDate);
bornColumn.setHeaderCaption("Born date");
----
This is equivalent to setting it with [methodname]#setText()# for the header
cell; the [classname]#HeaderCell# also allows setting the caption in HTML or as
a component, as well as styling it, as described later in
<<components.grid.headerfooter>>.
[[components.grid.columns.width]]
=== Column Widths
Columns have by default undefined width, which causes automatic sizing based on
the widths of the displayed data. You can set column widths explicitly by pixel
value with [methodname]#setWidth()#, or relatively using expand ratios with
[methodname]#setExpandRatio()#.
When using expand ratios, the columns with a non-zero expand ratio use the extra
space remaining from other columns, in proportion to the defined ratios.
You can specify minimum and maximum widths for the expanding columns with
[methodname]#setMinimumWidth()# and [methodname]#setMaximumWidth()#,
respectively.
The user can resize columns by dragging their separators with the mouse. When resized manually,
all the columns widths are set to explicit pixel values, even if they had
relative values before.
[[components.grid.columns.frozen]]
=== Frozen Columns
You can set the number of columns to be frozen with
[methodname]#setFrozenColumnCount()#, so that they are not scrolled off when
scrolling horizontally.
[source, java]
----
grid.setFrozenColumnCount(2);
----
Setting the count to [parameter]#0# disables frozen data columns; setting it to
[parameter]#-1# also disables the selection column in multi-selection mode.
[[components.grid.generatedcolumns]]
== Generating Columns
Columns with values computed from other columns can be simply added by using
lambdas:
[source, java]
----
// Add generated full name column
Column<String> fullNameColumn = grid.addColumn(person ->
person.getFirstName() + " " + person.getLastName());
fullNameColumn.setHeaderCaption("Full name");
----
[[components.grid.renderer]]
== Column Renderers
A __renderer__ is a feature that draws the client-side representation of a data
value. This allows having images, HTML, and buttons in grid cells.
[[figure.components.grid.renderer]]
.Column renderers: image, date, HTML, and button
image::img/grid-renderers.png[width=75%, scaledwidth=100%]
Renderers implement the [interfacename]#Renderer# interface.
You set the column renderer in the [classname]#Grid.Column# object as follows:
[source, java]
----
Column<Integer> bornColumn = grid.addColumn(Person:getBirthYear);
...
Grid.Column bornColumn = grid.getColumn("born");
bornColumn.setRenderer(new NumberRenderer("born in %d AD"));
----
Renderers require a specific data type for the column. To convert to a property
type to a type required by a renderer, you can pass an optional
[interfacename]#Converter# to [methodname]#setRenderer()#, as described later in
this section. A converter can also be used to (pre)format the property values.
The converter is run on the server-side, before sending the values to the
client-side to be rendered with the renderer.
The following renderers are available, as defined in the server-side
[package]#com.vaadin.ui.renderers# package:
[classname]#ButtonRenderer#:: Renders the data value as the caption of a button. A [interfacename]#RendererClickListener# can be given to handle the button clicks.
ifdef::web[]
+
Typically, a button renderer is used to display buttons for operating on a data
item, such as edit, view, delete, etc. It is not meaningful to store the button
captions in the data source, rather you want to generate them, and they are
usually all identical.
+
[source, java]
----
List<Person> people = new ArrayList<>();
people.add(new Person("Nicolaus Copernicus", 1473));
people.add(new Person("Galileo Galilei", 1564));
people.add(new Person("Johannes Kepler", 1571));
// Create a grid
Grid<Person> grid = new Grid(people);
// Render a button that deletes the data row (item)
grid.addColumn(person -> "Delete" )
.setRenderer(new ButtonRenderer(clickEvent -> {
people.remove(clickEvent.getValue());
grid.setItems(people);
});
----
endif::web[]
[classname]#ImageRenderer#:: Renders the cell as an image.
The column type must be a [interfacename]#Resource#, as described in
<<dummy/../../../framework/application/application-resources#application.resources,"Images and Other Resources">>; only [classname]#ThemeResource# and
[classname]#ExternalResource# are currently supported for images in
[classname]#Grid#.
ifdef::web[]
+
[source, java]
----
Column<ThemeResource> imageColumn = grid.addColumn("picture",
p -> new ThemeResource("img/"+p.getLastname()+".jpg"));
imageColumn.setRenderer(new ImageRenderer());
----
+
You also need to define the row heights so that the images fit there. You can
set it in the theme for all data cells or for the column containing the images.
+
For the latter way, first define a CSS style name for grid and the column:
+
[source, java]
----
grid.setStyleName("gridwithpics128px");
imageColumn.setCellStyleGenerator(cell -> "imagecol");
----
ifdef::web[]
+
Then, define the style in CSS (Sass):
endif::web[]
+
[source, css]
----
.gridwithpics128px .imagecol {
height: 128px;
background: black;
text-align: center;
}
----
endif::web[]
[classname]#DateRenderer#:: Formats a column with a [classname]#Date# type using string formatter. The
format string is same as for [methodname]#String.format()# in Java API. The date
is passed in the parameter index 1, which can be omitted if there is only one
format specifier, such as "[literal]#++%tF++#".
ifdef::web[]
+
[source, java]
----
Grid.Column<Date> bornColumn = grid.addColumn(person:getBirthDate);
bornColumn.setRenderer(
new DateRenderer("%1$tB %1$te, %1$tY",
Locale.ENGLISH));
----
+
Optionally, a locale can be given. Otherwise, the default locale (in the
component tree) is used.
endif::web[]
[classname]#HTMLRenderer#:: Renders the cell as HTML.
This allows formatting the cell content, as well as using HTML features such as hyperlinks.
ifdef::web[]
+
Set the renderer in the [classname]#Grid.Column# object:
+
[source, java]
----
Column<String> htmlColumn grid.addColumn(person ->
"<a href='" + person.getDetailsUrl() + "' target='_top'>info</a>");
htmlColumn.setRenderer(new HtmlRenderer());
----
endif::web[]
[classname]#NumberRenderer#:: Formats column values with a numeric type extending [classname]#Number#:
[classname]#Integer#, [classname]#Double#, etc. The format can be specified
either by the subclasses of [classname]#java.text.NumberFormat#, namely
[classname]#DecimalFormat# and [classname]#ChoiceFormat#, or by
[methodname]#String.format()#.
ifdef::web[]
+
For example:
+
[source, java]
----
// Define some columns
Column<String> nameCol = grid.addColumn(person::getName);
Column<Integer> bornCol = grid.addColumn(person:getBirthYear);
Column<Integer> slettersCol = grid.addColumn("sletters");
Column<Double> ratingCol = grid.addColumn("rating");
// Use decimal format
bornCol.setRenderer(new NumberRenderer(
new DecimalFormat("in #### AD")));
// Use textual formatting on numeric ranges
slettersCol.setRenderer(new NumberRenderer(
new ChoiceFormat("0#none|1#one|2#multiple")));
// Use String.format() formatting
ratingCol.setRenderer(new NumberRenderer(
"%02.4f", Locale.ENGLISH));
// Add some data rows
grid.addItems(new Person("Nicolaus Copernicus", 1473, 2, 0.4),
new Person("Galileo Galilei", 1564, 0, 4.2),
new Person("Johannes Kepler", 1571, 1, 2.3));
----
endif::web[]
[classname]#ProgressBarRenderer#:: Renders a progress bar in a column with a [classname]#Double# type. The value
must be between 0.0 and 1.0.
ifdef::web[]
+
For example:
+
[source, java]
----
// Define some columns
Column<String> nameCol = grid.addColumn(person::getName);
Column<Double> ratingCol = grid.addColumn("rating");
ratingCol.setRenderer(new ProgressBarRenderer());
// Add some data rows
grid.addItems(new Person("Nicolaus Copernicus", 0.4),
new Person("Galileo Galilei", 4.2),
new Person("Johannes Kepler", 2.3));
----
endif::web[]
[classname]#TextRenderer#:: Displays plain text as is. Any HTML markup is quoted.
[[components.grid.renderer.custom]]
=== Custom Renderers
Renderers are component extensions that require a client-side counterpart. See
<<dummy/../../../framework/clientsidewidgets/clientsidewidgets-grid#clientsidewidgets.grid.renderers,"Renderers">>
for information on implementing custom renderers.
[[components.grid.headerfooter]]
== Header and Footer
A grid by default has a header, which displays column names, and can have a
footer. Both can have multiple rows and neighbouring header row cells can be
joined to feature column groups.
[[components.grid.headerfooter.adding]]
=== Adding and Removing Header and Footer Rows
A new header row is added with [methodname]#prependHeaderRow()#, which adds it
at the top of the header, [methodname]#appendHeaderRow()#, which adds it at the
bottom of the header, or with [methodname]#addHeaderRowAt()#, which inserts it
at the specified 0-base index. All of the methods return a
[classname]#HeaderRow# object, which you can use to work on the header further.
[source, java]
----
// Group headers by joining the cells
HeaderRow groupingHeader = grid.prependHeaderRow();
...
// Create a header row to hold column filters
HeaderRow filterRow = grid.appendHeaderRow();
...
----
Similarly, you can add footer rows with [methodname]#appendFooterRow()#,
[methodname]#prependFooterRow()#, and [methodname]#addFooterRowAt()#.
[[components.grid.headerfooter.joining]]
=== Joining Header and Footer Cells
You can join two or more header or footer cells with the [methodname]#join()#
method. For header cells, the intention is usually to create column grouping,
while for footer cells, you typically calculate sums or averages.
[source, java]
----
// Group headers by joining the cells
HeaderRow groupingHeader = grid.prependHeaderRow();
HeaderCell namesCell = groupingHeader.join(
groupingHeader.getCell("firstname"),
groupingHeader.getCell("lastname")).setText("Person");
HeaderCell yearsCell = groupingHeader.join(
groupingHeader.getCell("born"),
groupingHeader.getCell("died"),
groupingHeader.getCell("lived")).setText("Dates of Life");
----
[[components.grid.headerfooter.content]]
=== Text and HTML Content
You can set the header caption with [methodname]#setText()#, in which case any
HTML formatting characters are quoted to ensure security.
[source, java]
----
HeaderRow mainHeader = grid.getDefaultHeaderRow();
mainHeader.getCell("firstname").setText("First Name");
mainHeader.getCell("lastname").setText("Last Name");
mainHeader.getCell("born").setText("Born In");
mainHeader.getCell("died").setText("Died In");
mainHeader.getCell("lived").setText("Lived For");
----
To use raw HTML in the captions, you can use [methodname]#setHtml()#.
[source, java]
----
namesCell.setHtml("<b>Names</b>");
yearsCell.setHtml("<b>Years</b>");
----
[[components.grid.headerfooter.components]]
=== Components in Header or Footer
You can set a component in a header or footer cell with
[methodname]#setComponent()#. Often, this feature is used to allow filtering, as
described in <<components.grid.filtering>>, which also gives an example of the
use.
[[components.grid.filtering]]
== Filtering
The ability to include components in the grid header can be used to create
filters for the grid data. Filtering is done in the container data source, so
the container must be of type that implements
[interfacename]#Container.Filterable#.
[[figure.components.grid.filtering]]
.Filtering Grid
image::img/grid-filtering.png[width=50%, scaledwidth=80%]
The filtering illustrated in <<figure.components.grid.filtering>> can be created
as follows:
[source, java]
----
// Have a list of persons
List<Person> persons = exampleDataSource();
// Create a grid bound to it
Grid<Person> grid = new Grid(persons);
grid.setSelectionMode(SelectionMode.NONE);
grid.setWidth("500px");
grid.setHeight("300px");
// Create a header row to hold column filters
HeaderRow filterRow = grid.appendHeaderRow();
// Set up a filter for all columns
for (Column<?> col: grid.getColumns()) {
HeaderCell cell = filterRow.getCell(col);
// Have an input field to use for filter
TextField filterField = new TextField();
// Update filter When the filter input is changed
filterField.addValueChangeListener(event -> {
// Filter the list of items
List<String> filteredList =
Lists.newArrayList(personList.filter(persons,
Predicates.containsPattern(event.getValue())));
// Apply filtered data
grid.setItems(filteredList);
});
cell.setComponent(filterField);
}
----
[[components.grid.sorting]]
== Sorting
A user can sort the data in a grid on a column by clicking the column header.
Clicking another time on the current sort column reverses the sort direction.
Clicking on other column headers while keeping the Shift key pressed adds a
secondary or more sort criteria.
[[figure.components.grid.sorting]]
.Sorting Grid on Multiple Columns
image::img/grid-sorting.png[width=50%, scaledwidth=75%]
Defining sort criteria programmatically can be done with the various
alternatives of the [methodname]#sort()# method. You can sort on a specific
column with [methodname]#sort(Column column)#, which defaults to ascending
sorting order, or [methodname]#sort(Column column, SortDirection
direction)#, which allows specifying the sort direction.
[source, java]
----
grid.sort(nameColumn, SortDirection.DESCENDING);
----
To sort on multiple columns, you need to use the fluid sort API with
[methodname]#sort(Sort)#, which allows chaining sorting rules. Sorting rules are
created with the static [methodname]#by()# method, which defines the primary
sort column, and [methodname]#then()#, which can be used to specify any
secondary sort columns. They default to ascending sort order, but the sort
direction can be given with an optional parameter.
[source, java]
----
// Sort first by city and then by name
grid.sort(Sort.by(cityColumn, SortDirection.ASCENDING)
.then(nameColumn, SortDirection.DESCENDING));
----
[[components.grid.editing]]
== Editing
Grid supports line-based editing, where double-clicking a row opens the row
editor. In the editor, the input fields can be edited, as well as navigated with
kbd:[Tab] and kbd:[Shift+Tab] keys. If validation fails, an error is displayed and the user
can correct the inputs.
To enable editing, you need to call [methodname]#setEditorEnabled(true)# for the
grid.
[source, java]
----
Grid<Person> grid = new Grid(persons);
grid.setEditorEnabled(true);
----
Grid supports two row editor modes - buffered and unbuffered. The default mode is
buffered. The mode can be changed with [methodname]#setBuffered(false)#
[[components.grid.editing.buffered]]
=== Buffered Mode
The editor has a [guibutton]#Save# button that commits
the data item to the container data source and closes the editor. The
[guibutton]#Cancel# button discards the changes and exits the editor.
A row under editing is illustrated in <<figure.components.grid.editing>>.
[[figure.components.grid.editing]]
.Editing a Grid Row
image::img/grid-editor-basic.png[width=50%, scaledwidth=75%]
[[components.grid.editing.unbuffered]]
=== Unbuffered Mode
The editor has no buttons and all changed data is committed directly
to the container. If another row is clicked, the editor for the current row is closed and
a row editor for the clicked row is opened.
[[components.grid.editing.fields]]
=== Editor Fields
The editor fields are configured in [classname]#Column#and bound to
the bean data source with a [classname]#Binder#, which
also handles tasks such as validation, as explained later.
To disable editing in a particular column, you can call
[methodname]#setEditorField()# in the [classname]#Column# object with
[parameter]#null# parameter.
In the following example, we configure a field with validation and styling:
[source, java]
----
// Create an editor for name
TextField nameEditor = new TextField();
// Custom CSS style
nameEditor.addStyleName("nameeditor");
// Add editor to name column
nameColumn.setEditorField(nameEditor);
----
Setting an editor field to [parameter]#null# deletes the currently existing
editor field and makes the column non-editable.
ifdef::web[]
[[components.grid.editing.captions]]
=== Customizing Editor Buttons
In the buffered mode, the editor has two buttons: [guibutton]#Save# and [guibutton]#Cancel#. You can
set their captions with [methodname]#setEditorSaveCaption()# and
[methodname]#setEditorCancelCaption()#, respectively.
In the following example, we demonstrate one way to translate the captions:
[source, java]
----
// Captions are stored in a resource bundle
ResourceBundle bundle = ResourceBundle.getBundle(
MyAppCaptions.class.getName(),
Locale.forLanguageTag("fi")); // Finnish
// Localize the editor button captions
grid.setEditorSaveCaption(
bundle.getString(MyAppCaptions.SaveKey));
grid.setEditorCancelCaption(
bundle.getString(MyAppCaptions.CancelKey));
----
endif::web[]
[[components.grid.editing.fieldgroup]]
=== Binding to Data with a Binder
Data binding to the item under editing is handled with a
[classname]#Binder#, which you need to set with
[methodname]#setEditorFieldGroup#. This is mostly useful when using
special-purpose, such as to enable bean validation.
For example, assuming that we want to enable bean validation for a bean such as
the following:
[source, java]
----
public class Person implements Serializable {
@NotNull
@Size(min=2, max=10)
private String name;
@Min(1)
@Max(130)
private int age;
...]
----
We can now use a [classname]#BeanBinder# in the [classname]#Grid# as
follows:
[source, java]
----
Grid<Person> grid = new Grid(examplePersonList());
Column<String> nameCol = grid.addColumn(Person::getName);
Column<Integer> ageCol = grid.addColumn(Person::getAge);
grid.setEditorEnabled(true);
TextField nameEditor = new TextField();
nameCol.setEditorField(nameEditor);
// Enable bean validation for the data
BeanBinder<Person> binder = new BeanBinder<>(Person.class);
// Have some extra validation in a field
binder.addField(nameEditor, "name")
.withValidator(new RegexpValidator(
"^\\p{Alpha}+ \\p{Alpha}+$",
"Need first and last name"));
grid.setEditorBinder(binder);
----
To use bean validation as in the example above, you need to include an
implementation of the Bean Validation API in the classpath, as described in
<<dummy/../../../framework/datamodel/datamodel-forms.asciidoc#datamodel.forms.beans,"Binding Beans to Forms">>.
ifdef::web[]
[[components.grid.editing.validation]]
=== Handling Validation Errors
The input fields are validated when the value is updated. The default
error handler displays error indicators in the invalid fields, as well as the
first error in the editor.
[[figure.components.grid.errors]]
.Editing a Grid Row
image::img/grid-editor-errors.png[width=50%, scaledwidth=75%]
You can modify the error handling by implementing a custom
[interfacename]#EditorErrorHandler# or by extending the
[classname]#DefaultEditorErrorHandler#.
endif::web[]
[[components.grid.scrolling]]
== Programmatic Scrolling
You can scroll to first item with [methodname]#scrollToStart()#, to end with
[methodname]#scrollToEnd()#, or to a specific row with [methodname]#scrollTo()#.
[[components.grid.stylegeneration]]
== Generating Row or Cell Styles
You can style entire rows or individual cells with a
[interfacename]#StyleGenerator#, typically used through Java lambdas.
[[components.grid.stylegeneration.row]]
=== Generating Row Styles
You set a [interfacename]#StyleGenerator# to a grid with
[methodname]#setStyleGenerator()#. The [methodname]#getStyle()# method gets a
date item, and should return a style name or [parameter]#null# if
no style is generated.
For example, to add a style names to rows having certain values in one
property of an item, you can style them as follows:
[source, java]
----
grid.setStyleGenerator(person -> {
// Style based on alive status
person.isAlive() ? null : "dead";
});
----
You could then style the rows with CSS as follows:
[source, css]
----
.v-grid-row.dead {
color: gray;
}
----
[[components.grid.stylegeneration.cell]]
=== Generating Cell Styles
You set a [interfacename]#StyleGenerator# to a grid with
[methodname]#setStyleGenerator()#. The [methodname]#getStyle()# method gets
a [classname]#CellReference#, which contains various information about the cell
and a reference to the grid, and should return a style name or [parameter]#null#
if no style is generated.
For example, to add a style name to a specific column, you can match on
the column as follows:
[source, java]
----
// Static style based on column
bornColumn.setStyleGenerator(person -> "rightalign");
----
You could then style the cells with a CSS rule as follows:
[source, css]
----
.v-grid-cell.rightalign {
text-align: right;
}
----
[[components.grid.css]]
== Styling with CSS
[source, css]
----
.v-grid {
.v-grid-scroller, .v-grid-scroller-horizontal { }
.v-grid-tablewrapper {
.v-grid-header {
.v-grid-row {
.v-grid-cell, .frozen, .v-grid-cell-focused { }
}
}
.v-grid-body {
.v-grid-row,
.v-grid-row-stripe,
.v-grid-row-has-data {
.v-grid-cell, .frozen, .v-grid-cell-focused { }
}
}
.v-grid-footer {
.v-grid-row {
.v-grid-cell, .frozen, .v-grid-cell-focused { }
}
}
}
.v-grid-header-deco { }
.v-grid-footer-deco { }
.v-grid-horizontal-scrollbar-deco { }
.v-grid-editor {
.v-grid-editor-cells { }
.v-grid-editor-footer {
.v-grid-editor-message { }
.v-grid-editor-buttons {
.v-grid-editor-save { }
.v-grid-editor-cancel { }
}
}
}
}
----
A [classname]#Grid# has an overall [literal]#++v-grid++# style. The actual grid
has three parts: a header, a body, and a footer. The scrollbar is a custom
element with [literal]#++v-grid-scroller++# style. In addition, there are some
decoration elements.
Grid cells, whether thay are in the header, body, or footer, have a basic
[literal]#++v-grid-cell++# style. Cells in a frozen column additionally have a
[literal]#++frozen++# style. Rows have [literal]#++v-grid-row++# style, and
every other row has additionally a [literal]#++v-grid-row-stripe++# style.
The focused row has additionally [literal]#++v-grid-row-focused++# style and
focused cell [literal]#++v-grid-cell-focused++#. By default, cell focus is
visible, with the border stylable with [parameter]#$v-grid-cell-focused-border#
parameter in Sass. Row focus has no visible styling, but can be made visible
with the [parameter]#$v-grid-row-focused-background-color# parameter or with a
custom style rule.
In editing mode, a [literal]#++v-grid-editor++# overlay is placed on the row
under editing. In addition to the editor field cells, it has an error message
element, as well as the buttons.
((()))
|