Book Image

Learning Ext JS

By : Colin Ramsay, Shea Frederick, Steve 'Cutter' Blades
Book Image

Learning Ext JS

By: Colin Ramsay, Shea Frederick, Steve 'Cutter' Blades

Overview of this book

<p>As more and more of our work is done through a web browser, and more businesses build web rather than desktop applications, users want web applications that look and feel like desktop applications. Ext JS is a JavaScript library that makes it (relatively) easy to create desktop-style user interfaces in a web application, including multiple windows, toolbars, drop-down menus, dialog boxes, and much more. Both Commercial and Open Source licenses are available for Ext JS.<br /><br />Ext JS has the unique advantage of being the only client-side UI library that also works as an application development library. Learning Ext JS will help you create rich, dynamic, and AJAX-enabled web applications that look good and perform beyond the expectations of your users.<br /><br />From the building blocks of the application layout, to complex dynamic Grids and Forms, this book will guide you through the basics of using Ext JS, giving you the knowledge required to create rich user experiences beyond typical web interfaces. It will also provide you with the tools you need to use AJAX, by consuming server-side data directly into the many interfaces of the Ext JS component library.</p>
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
15
Index

Dialogs

As previously mentioned, dialogs can be likened to the prompt and alert functions that are available in most browser implementations of JavaScript. Although the appearance of those pop ups is controlled by the browser and operating system, and their behavior is limited to the most common cases, these restrictions don't apply to the Ext JS dialogs.

Note

Although the dialog class is actually Ext.MessageBox, Ext JS provides a shorthand version - Ext.Msg. This shorthand version can make your code a little more concise, but it's up to you which one you use, as they're both functionally equivalent.

Let's take a look at the ready-made pop ups that Ext JS makes available.

Off the shelf

We've talked about how Ext provides a replacement for the JavaScript alert, so let's have a look at that first:

Ext.Msg.alert('Hey!', 'Something happened.');

The first thing to notice is that Msg.alert takes two parameters, whereas the standard alert takes only...