Is it possible for an input-view to have a form and some layout below it? Would be nice to show some layout below a text-input for example.
It's not possible to have layout with a form at this time.
Related
I wanted to know if I can control or customise the web part repeater with carousel properties using a JavaScript/jQuery ? such as speed or easing or the way the images aligned
If you are using a repeater web part for a carousel in Kentico and you want to be able to set the values for the carousel properties in the repeater configuration you can clone the repeater web part, add the carousel properties into the cloned repeater web part code, and into the Fields in the web part properties. Then you would pass those properties to the front end as javascript variables using RegisterClientScriptBlock
You can modify the speed in the initalization script property, just add something like speed: 500
You can read the documentation to see what all you can do with that carousel.
I have done this multiple times. This is what I would suggest you
Create Page type for your slides Bind it with a repeater (Not basic
repeater)
For markup use Slick slider. It's one of the best library
to create slider which are responsive too
You can do anything possible using this slider. I have done all sort of crazy things with slick slider. Let me know if you need any more help on this.
Slick Slider
I have been working on a database in Lotus Domino Designer 8.5, specifically with XPages. I've noticed that I can include a field on a FORM as a color field, with a color picker, but the same functionality is not available within XPages. Basically, the person populating the document would pick a color (Green, Yellow, Red, or Blue), and I would like the field to show that color block. I am fairly new to Domino Designer, so I don't know if I'm missing something or some coding technique, but any advice or guidance would be helpful.
You can use new HTML5 input type of color.
<xp:inputText id="inputText1" type="color"></xp:inputText>
Note: It does not work in Internet Explorer.
I did something like this in an XPages "spreadsheet". Take a look at my blog article at http://www.teamspace.ca/TeamSpace/Blog.nsf/dx/using-xpages-to-develop-complex-reports-part-2.htm
You want to look at CSS.
You should create a stylesheet and then add that style sheet to the page as a resource. Then you simply apply that style to your resource. So you would set in the stylesheet how you want fields to look if they are black. Then you apply that style to any fields you want to have the same color. This allows you to change all fields at the same time by simply modifying the stylesheet, or having styles computed easily.
I will see if I can dig up some code for you.
I would stay away from the individual styling that Domino designer uses.
I did sth like this in an application using XPages and I used this one:
http://www.eyecon.ro/colorpicker/
Very easy to implement to a editbox control on an XPage.
I'm programming an android app with a list displaying images and some additional information like title, place, etc...
I'm new to the android ecosystem and wondering what are the best practices to implement a list element which normally displays the mentioned information and turns into input fields on a press on the listelement.
Do I have to draw the display elements (e.g. TextField) and the edit element on top of each other and set visible for either display or input? How to handle this generally? Or do I replace the layout responsible for the list element altogether?
I know that for the simple case of a text there is a simple solution for making the EditText field look like an uneditable TextField. I'm, however, looking for a general answer covering broader cases than just a TextField.
Thanks!
you can make the elements of the listview a view flipper having two views.one you textview and other and edittext.
<ViewFlipper
...
<TextView
... />
<EditText
... />
/ViewFlipper>
Then in the onItemClickListener of the list items you can call flipper.showNext();
So, flipper works like, it shows only the first view defined in it and on the subsequent call of showNext() it displays the next view defined in it.
So if you have 2 elements in it, it will behave as the coin with two sides.
So in your situation there are a few ways you can achieve this.
First way is to build a layout which contains TextView and EditText and in first initialization your edit text won't be visible. And in your OnItemClick you have to hide your textview and show editext with value of your current data and option to edit.
The second way which I think is more user friendly is that you can show an AlertDialog after OnItemClick with custom layout where you can change the values and update the listview after user press Yes or do nothing is he selects No.
It depends on you which way you will do that, but I think the second option is the better one.
If I have a xml file linear layout with CheckBox, TextView and ImageView and want this to display as scrollable list, having different name and different pictures in every rom of ListView , how can I do it. I am really confused, can you please help me understand. Thank you.
What you're trying to achieve is a custom list row. There are plenty of examples around:
http://appfulcrum.com/?p=311
http://www.softwarepassion.com/android-series-custom-listview-items-and-adapters/
I want to design one form that contains TextField and ListView in J2ME. But I don't know how to create this form. It is looked like Dictionary Form. Could anybody help me to do that?
You can't really do that with the basic UI controls in MIDP.
List can't contain TextField.
I would suggest looking at LWUIT since it has better controls.
Otherwise, if you don't need to display Images in your List, then you can use a Form containing both TextField and StringItem. Unfortunately, an ItemStateListener added to the Form will probably not give you as much information as a List.
Implementing the list yourself in a CustomItem means writing quite a bit of code but is doable.
If what you need is a TextField where you enter a search String and a List that displays the search result, I suggest using a TextBox first, then a List. Separate screens are by far the quickest solution here.
Edit: you can't use swing in j2me. what you can do is have just a textfield in a form, then add/remove StringItems to/from the Form when the user changes the content of the TextField. You should be able to rely on ItemStateListener to tell you when the textfield content changes.