Book Image

ExtGWT Rich Internet Application Cookbook

By : Odili Charles Opute , Oded Nissan
Book Image

ExtGWT Rich Internet Application Cookbook

By: Odili Charles Opute , Oded Nissan

Overview of this book

<p>Get ready to build the next generation Gmail, Facebook, or Meebo, with HTML5 and Server Push, taking advantage of the power and versatility of Java with ExtGWT. Sencha Ext GWT takes GWT to the next level, giving you high-performance widgets, feature-rich templates and layouts, advanced charting, data loaders and stores,&nbsp; accessibility, and much more.<br /><br /><i>ExtGWT Rich Internet Application Cookbook will teach you to quickly build&nbsp; stunning functionality into your own apps with ExtGWT</i>.<br /><br />This is a catalog of practical solutions to get your ExtGWT web app up and running in no time, with tips for persistence and best practices. You begin by playing with panels, windows, and tabs, to learn the essentials. Next, you engage yourself with forms, buttons, toolbars and menus to build on further. Dealing with the UI and the trees will follow to help you make stunning user interfaces. Then you will be taught to work with Listview, Views, and Gridpanels, the more complex problems. The book will then deal with charts, visualization, and drag and drop to take you to the next level. Finally, you will wind up with serialization, persistence, and custom theming. Now, you are an expert!</p>
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
ExtGWT Rich Internet Application Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Event Handling — Making Those GUIs Do Something
Jakarta Commons-FileUpload

Building grids with ColumnLayout


ColumnLayout positions and sizes a container's children horizontally, with each component specifying how much of the container's available width it will take up. This width specification which can be expressed in pixels or as a percentage is encapsulated as a ColumnData object, the child widgets are then sized by ColumnData and positioned in horizontal columns. If you need to render components in a small number of horizontal blocks, such as a three column (left, middle, and right) segmented form, then ColumnLayout is your best bet.

How to do it...

Set ColumnLayout as the layout for a container and then add components to the container providing a ColumnData object during the add operation that will specify how much of the container's width the component will occupy.

Note

The sum of the values given to ColumnData during all the add operations on the container should be less or equal to 1 (for percentage values) or less or equal to the width of the container...