Andre Dietisheim [
http://community.jboss.org/people/adietish] modified the document:
"How we use jface databinding in Deltacloud Tools"
To view the document, visit:
http://community.jboss.org/docs/DOC-15964
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h1. Less code
If you use jface databinding to code your swt views in Eclipse you'll get spared from
writing listeners and updating code by hand. JFace databinding offers very nice
abstractions and automatisms that offer funcitonalities for the vast majority of the tasks
where you have to listen for user input and update the view accordingly.
h1. *Premise*
If you implement a complex and highly dynamic UI in Eclipse you'll have to code many
many many listener that wait for user actions. Those listeners mostly do nothing
spectacular but update widgets and models in reaction to the user inputs. You end up with
a lot of repetitive boilerplate code. UI frameworks in the non-java land (ex.
http://qt.nokia.com/products/ Trolltechs QT) already have approaches that are far more
elegant and slick than what we knew for Swing and SWT.
By luck Eclipse has progressed in this area (since 2005!) and offers neat abstractions
that help a lot in this area and lead to far more concise and a less verbose
implementations: Jface Databinding!
h1. Usecase
We had to implement a wizard page that allows a user to create a connection to a
deltacloud server. The user has to supply a name, an url and the credentials for it.
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/10530/cloud-conn...
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/10530/cloud-...
Sounds pretty simple at first sight. Looking closer at it you'll discover few buttons
that shall be disabled if you enter inacurrate values. Furthermore we need to inform the
user in a intuitive way and mark them by error decorations. The wizard page shall also
show a global error message that reflects what's wrong in what the user entered.
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/10531/invalid-ur...
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/10531/invali...
h1. h1. Where's the source?
You may have a look at the implementation we discuss here at CloudConnectionPage.java
(
http://anonsvn.jboss.org/repos/jbosstools/trunk/deltacloud/plugins/org.jb...)
h1. *A first step: only use unique names*
Our GUI holds multiple connections to various deltacloud servers. The wizard allows you to
edit existing connections or create new ones. The may of course not use names that are
already picked for other connections.
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/10533/duplicate-...
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/10533/duplic...
To be intuitive the wizard shall decorate the field that's invalid. The wizard shall
also show you the full error text in the title area and disable the finish button if the
user supplies invalid values.
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/102-15964-13-105...
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/102-15964-13...
h1. *How to decorate the name text field*
Let us take a first step and implement the code that will decorate our text field if we
enter an name that's already used.
Jface databinding is a framework that is built upon the principle of model-view-controller
(*MVC*). It connects a view to a model and transfers the values the user enters in the
view to the model. It of course also operates the other way round and updates the view if
new values are set to the model.
If a invalid value is detected while transfering it, an error is generated. If a user
supplies a duplicate name to our connection, we'll be able show the error that occurs
while transfering this name to the model.
h2. Let us create a model
As explained above, databinding operates on a model. We therefore need a model to store
our values. We'll use a bean for that sake and provide notification capabilities with
PropertyChangeSupport. PropertyChangeSupport, an implementation of the observer pattern,
that's shipped with the jdk, allows jface databinding to observe value changes in our
model. It will get notified as soon as we set new names to the model.
public class CloudConnectionModel extends ObservablePojo {
public static final String PROPERTY_NAME = "name";
private String name;
public CloudConnectionModel(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
public String getName() {
return name;
}
public void setName(String name) {
getPropertyChangeSupport().firePropertyChange(PROPERTY_NAME, this.name,
this.name = name);
}
}
h2. Databinding, transfer the user input to our model!
We now have a model that holds our name. We now have to listen for user input on the text
widget and set the model accordingly. We of course don't want to do that manually, we
want databinding to provide this functionality.
h2. A bit of theory: what the hell are observables?
JFace databinding does not operate on the level of SWT listeners. It offers its own
observer pattern. The main benefit here is that both ends of a *MVC* dont differ any
longer, there are no SWT listeners to listen to changes in widgets nor
PropertyChangeSupprt listeners to act upon changes in a model. Jface databinding observers
*Observables*. Any participant to the jface databinding framework must implement the
Observable interface. It of course provides adapters that adapt the various observer
implementations that exist in the wild.
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/102-15964-13-105...
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/102-15964-13...
h2. Databdining, adapt those beasts!
We need an *Observable* for our model since our model uses PropertyChangeSupport to notify
observers. Jface databinding offers a factory that adapts the PropertyChangeSupport we
used. To tell databindirng to observe changes in the name property we do the following:
IObservableValue beanPropertyObservable =
BeanProperties.value(CloudConnectionModel.class, "name")
IObservableValue beanPropertyObservable =
BeanProperties.value(CloudConnectionModel.class,
"name").observe(connectionModel)
We also need to provide an observable for the text widget, that allows the user to enter
the name of the connection. We tell the appropriate observable factory it to listen to
text modifications on the text widget:
IObservableValue textObservable =
WidgetProperties.text(SWT.Modify).observe(nameText)
h2. Now connect both ends
Now that we have observables on both ends (model and widget), we can tell databinding to
connect both ends of our *MVC* and transfer the values between them. Databinding does that
if we instruct the *DataBindingContext* to create a bind them:
DataBindingContext dbc = new DataBindingContext();
dbc.bindValue(
WidgetProperties.text(SWT.Modify).observe(nameText),
BeanProperties.value(CloudConnectionModel.class,
CloudConnectionModel.PROPERTY_NAME).observe(connectionModel));
h2. But hey, inputs are not always valid
We now told databinding to transfer the name the user enters in our text widget to our
model and to update the widget if we set a new name to the model. What we still miss is
the ability to constrain user inputs.
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/10542/convert-va...
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/10542/conver...
Jface databinding offers the ability to convert and validate values while it transfers
values from one end to the other. In other words we can tell it to validate the name
before it sets the user input to the model.Databinding uses *IValidator* instances for
that sake:
private class CloudNameValidator implements IValidator {
public IStatus validate(Object value) {
String connectionName = (String) value;
if (DeltaCloudManager.getDefault().findCloud(connectionName) != null) {
return *ValidationStatus.error("The name chosen in already in
use");*
} else {
return ValidationStatus.ok();
}
}
}
The binding we created now has to be told to use our CloudNameValidator. We do that in a
custom *UpdateValueStrategy*. As we saw above, databinding transfers values both ways:
from the view to the model and the other way round. Databinding therefore offers
strategies for both transfers. We only want to validate names that get transfered from the
text widget, where the user may enter new names, to the model. We dont need validation
where new names set in the model get propagated to the text widget. We therefore only set
a single UpateValueStrategy and stick to the default (that does not validate) for the
other strategy by indicating *null*.
dbc.bindValue(
WidgetProperties.text(SWT.Modify).observe(nameText),
BeanProperties.value(CloudConnectionModel.class,
CloudConnectionModel.PROPERTY_NAME).observe(connectionModel),
*new UpdateValueStrategy().setBeforeSetValidator(new CloudNameValidator()),*
null
);
h1. Disable finish button
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/showImage/102-15964-13-105...
http://community.jboss.org/servlet/JiveServlet/downloadImage/102-15964-13...
In non-technical pure logical terms there's a single trigger to all these markers: You
entered a bad value to a field.
The wizard reacts by decorating the text field that holds a the duplicate name, it
displays the error in the header and it disabled the Finish button.
Jface databinding offers a context that holds a global validity state for a form. If a
form gets invalid, the golbal state gets invalid, too. A jface wizards is built upon
several pages. Such a page is a form that may be globally valid or invalid.
DataBindingContext dbc = new DataBindingContext();
To
enable/disable the Finish button you now need to connect the wizard page to the
DataBindingContext. Jface databinding will then enable/disable the Finish (or the Next
Page button for instance) automatically for you. To bind the validity of the databinding
context to the page validity, you only need 1 line of code:
WizardPageSupport.create(this, dbc);
Jface databinding will now
enable the finish button (or the next-page button) for you as soon as the form aka the
databinding context is valid.
h2.
h1. Conclusione
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