You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to dev@pivot.apache.org by "Sandro Martini (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2012/05/04 11:52:54 UTC

[jira] [Closed] (PIVOT-526) listview and treeview items should have their own "renderer" property

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PIVOT-526?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Sandro Martini closed PIVOT-526.
--------------------------------

    
> listview and treeview items should have their own "renderer" property
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: PIVOT-526
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PIVOT-526
>             Project: Pivot
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: wtk
>            Reporter: Appddevvv
>
> I was trying to change the way the selection looks when an item is selected (versus non-selected). This was to provide additional annotations for the selected item (for me, I wanted to change the highlighted box color, highlight box size, and text font would change based on selection status). I can do this if I write a more complex renderer with the logic built into it, or I could break this logic out and when the item is selected us the renderer from my basket of renderers based on state e.g. the selected state. I am a total flub at writing renderers and gave up on this for today but this was my thought around controls with items in them.
> I don't think anyone is going be perish without this, but it does allow clients of the library to provide their own renders to reflect their own state versus a single renderer that has a bunch of switches in it to reflect state. This makes per-item rendering easier to write...even in the existing pivot code actually. You could probably factor out a subclass to handle common rendering for controls with items in them.
> You can mark this one for the future. I'm not sure I am using the word renderer correctly here. Its' whatever "<insert class name here>" is used to draw the individual items. I'm not sure this is the skin or the renderer.
> If a default renderer is used when none is present on the item, you would fall back into the current approach. Hence, the existing API does not need to change at all but the "item" api would be enhanced.

--
This message is automatically generated by JIRA.
If you think it was sent incorrectly, please contact your JIRA administrators: https://issues.apache.org/jira/secure/ContactAdministrators!default.jspa
For more information on JIRA, see: http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira