Book Image

Ext JS 3.0 Cookbook

Book Image

Ext JS 3.0 Cookbook

Overview of this book

Using Ext JS you can easily build desktop-style interfaces in your web applications. Over 400,000 developers are working smarter with Ext JS and yet most of them fail to exercise all of the features that this powerful JavaScript library has to offer. Get to grips with all of the features that you would expect with this quick and easy-to-follow Ext JS Cookbook. This book provides clear instructions for getting the most out of Ext JS with and offers many exercises to build impressive rich internet applications. This cookbook shows techniques and "patterns" for building particular interface styles and features in Ext JS. Pick what you want and move ahead. It teaches you how to use all of the Ext JS widgets and components smartly, through practical examples and exercises. Native and custom layouts, forms, grids, listviews, treeviews, charts, tab panels, menus, toolbars, and many more components are covered in a multitude of examples.The book also looks at best practices on data storage, application architecture, code organization, presenting recipes for improving themóour cookbook provides expert information for people working with Ext JS.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Ext JS 3.0 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
Preface

Saving resources with lazy component instantiation


In large applications, instantiating all application objects when the page loads—those that are initially needed and those that might or might not be needed later—will cause a number of unused objects to be sitting in the memory.

Lazy instantiation reduces the amount of consumed resources by initially committing to memory only the configuration of the objects (and not the actual object instances) and deferring instance creation until render time. This recipe explains how lazy instantiation is done.

You will build two panels that look identical. The items of the first panel are explicitly instantiated, and this is how the panel will look:

The second panel's items are instantiated at render time. This is a screenshot of the second panel:

How to do it...

  1. 1. Create a function that animates the progress bars used in the panels:

    Ext.onReady(function() {
    var loadFn = function(btn, textItem, statusBar, pBar) {
    btn = Ext.getCmp(btn);
    btn.disable();...