Book Image

Ext GWT 2.0: Beginner's Guide

By : Daniel Vaughan
Book Image

Ext GWT 2.0: Beginner's Guide

By: Daniel Vaughan

Overview of this book

<p>Ext GWT, also known as GXT, takes Google Web Toolkit one step further by providing a wide range of powerful user interface components. It allows a developer to create powerful web applications that are almost like desktop applications. However to leverage all the features of this powerful Java library for creating desktop-style web applications, you need to learn how and when to use the right user interface component.<br /><br />Ext GWT 2.0: Beginner's Guide is a practical book that teaches you how to use the EXT GWT library to its full potential. It provides a thorough and no-nonsense explanation of the Ext GWT library, what it offers and how to use it through practical examples. This book provides clear, step-by-step instructions for getting the most out of Ext GWT and offers practical examples and techniques that can be used for building your own applications in EXT GWT<br /><br />This book gets you up and running instantly to build powerful Rich Internet Applications (RIA) with Ext GWT. It then takes you through all the interface-building widgets and components of Ext GWT using practical examples to demonstrate when, where, and how to use each of them. Layouts, forms, panels, grids, trees, toolbars, menus, and many other components are covered in the many examples packed in this book. You will also learn to present your data in a better way with templates and use some of the most sought-after features of Ext GWT in your web applications such as drag-and-drop and charts. Throughout the book a real application is built step by step using Ext GWT and deployed to Google App Engine.</p> <p>Imagine how great you'll feel when you're able to create great-looking desktop-style user interfaces for your web applications with Ext GWT!</p>
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Ext GWT 2.0 Beginner's Guide
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Preface
Index

Tooltip


The labels on buttons are concise by nature. For users who are familiar with your application or other applications that are similar, the label and icon may be enough for them to understand what the button does. Other users, however, will appreciate a more detailed explanation and that is where tooltips come in.

Tooltips can be added to buttons or other components to give the user further information when they hover their mouse over them.

We are now going to add a tooltip to our Link feed button so that a message displays when the user hovers their mouse over the button: