Flash datagrid component tutorial

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This is part of the flash tutorials

Introduction

Learning goals
  • Learn how to use the DataGrid component
Flash level
  • CS3 and ActionScript 3
Prerequisites
Moving on
Level and target population
  • Beginners
Quality
  • Not done yet, but this piece should help you solve some easy how to display data problems.

Data Grid level 0 - Creating a DataGrid and filling it with data

“The DataGrid class is a list-based component that provides a grid of rows and columns. You can specify an optional header row at the top of the component that shows all the property names. Each row consists of one or more columns, each of which represents a property that belongs to the specified data object. The DataGrid component is used to view data; it is not intended to be used as a layout tool like an HTML table. (DataGrid, retrieved 10:12, 30 October 2008 (UTC)).”

Let's create a table to display information about Learning management systems, i.e. a data grid with 3 colums. Column 1 is called "Name", column 2 is "License", column 3 is "Description. We then also will add 4 rows of data.

Two simple Flash DataGrids

You may have a look at the data-grid-0 example now or open the thumbnail of the screen dump to the right.

Below we will show three solutions:

  • Creating a most simple DataGrid with Flash CS3 by dragging a component to the stage.
  • Doing it with CS3 but using only ActionScript
  • Doing it with AS3 only, i.e. the Flex way

Adding code to a DataGrid instance

Step 1 - Make a DataGrid instance
  • Open the components library (e.g. hit CTRL-F7)
  • Drag a DataGrid to the stage
  • Give it an instance name, e.g. datagrid

You now will see an empty square on the stage without any visual appeal.

Step 2 - Resize

In the properties panel, make it a big bigger, e.g. w:300 and H:200

Step 3 - Fill in some data with ActionScript

If your instance name is datagrid then hit F9 in frame 1 (or wherever you want it to be) and copy/paste this code. The result is a three column table with headers.

datagrid.addColumn("Name");
datagrid.addColumn("License");
datagrid.addColumn("Description");
datagrid.addItem({Name:"Moodle", License:"GPL (free)", Description:"Good for blended activity-oriented teaching"});
datagrid.addItem({Name:"ATutor", License:"Free", Description:"Good for content-oriented teaching"});
datagrid.addItem({Name:"Blackboard", License:"Commercial", Description:"Good for content and exercice-oriented teaching"});
datagrid.addItem({Name:"MediaWiki", License:"GPL (free)", 
  Description:"Good for writing-to-learn and technical mini-projects teaching"});

The result is not absolutely convincing, since you can't read the contents of column three. It shows the minimum AS code you need to know in order to fill in DataGrid tables.

You can tune some properties of this grid within the Component Inspector (Shift-F7) or the properties panel. E.g. we made the cells editable. But most tailoring has to be done through ActionScript coding. There are dozens of properties and methods. In addition since the DataGrid is an assembly of Column and Cell objects you also may change things at these levels.

Below we show a slightly improved version.

Alternative - Pure AS3 creation

Instead of opening the component library, then dragging the component to the stage and giving it an instance name, you could just enter the code below in frame 1 of the main timeline. However, you still need a DataGrid component in your library ! (E.g. drag the component to the stage, then kill the instance).

Firstly we have to import some standard packages that we will need.

 // Import the necessary packages
 import fl.controls.DataGrid;
 import fl.controls.ScrollPolicy
 // Now create a a new instance of DataGrid and name it "datagrid_AS"
 var datagrid_AS:DataGrid = new DataGrid();

We also tailor the size of column three and make the whole widget horizontally scrollable. To do so we have to assign the column instance we want to change to a variable. This way, we can change its properties:

 // this is to make col. 3 a bit bigger
 var col3 = datagrid_AS.addColumn("Description");
 col3.minWidth = 350;

Then we have to set the size for the whole Grid

 // Fix the size
 datagrid_AS.width = 400;
 // Set the height to the number of rows + 1 (for the header).
 datagrid_AS.rowCount = datagrid_AS.length + 1;

Finally, we position this instance relative to the stage and put it on the stage for real.

 // Position it at x=300 and y = 70
 datagrid_AS.move(300, 70);
 // Then add it to the stage
 addChild(datagrid_AS);

Here is the complete code (that also can be found in the *.fla source file below):

// Import the necessary packages
import fl.controls.DataGrid;
import fl.controls.ScrollPolicy

// Now create a a new instance of DataGrid and name it "datagrid_AS"
var datagrid_AS:DataGrid = new DataGrid();

datagrid_AS.addColumn("Name");
datagrid_AS.addColumn("License");
// this is to make col. 3 a bit bigger
var col3 = datagrid_AS.addColumn("Description");
col3.minWidth = 350;
datagrid_AS.addItem({Name:"Moodle", License:"Free", Description:"Good for blended activity-oriented teaching"});
datagrid_AS.addItem({Name:"ATutor", License:"Free", Description:"Good for content-oriented teaching"});
datagrid_AS.addItem({Name:"Blackboard", License:"Commercial", Description:"Good for content and exercise-oriented teaching"});
datagrid_AS.addItem({Name:"MediaWiki", License:"GPL (free)", Description:"Good for writing-to-learn and technical mini-projects teaching"});

// Fix the size
datagrid_AS.width = 400;
// Set the height to the number of rows + 1 (for the header)
datagrid_AS.rowCount = datagrid_AS.length + 1;

// Position it at x=400 and y = 50
datagrid_AS.move(300, 70);

// Horizontal scrolling is on
datagrid_AS.horizontalScrollPolicy = ScrollPolicy.ON ;

// Then add it to the stage
addChild(datagrid_AS);

Example code - Creating and filling with data (CS3)

Creating a DataGrid and filling it with data using pure ActionScript

In order to do this you first should read first:

Data Grid level 1 - Dynamic fill-in

A dynamic data grid growing with user interaction data

We now shall see how to fill in a DataGrid with data from user interaction. E.g. we built a simple application that let's the user select three colors from a list of buttons which then will show up in the Grid. This is totally useless application, but it allows to show the principle.

You may have a look at the data-grid-1 example now or open the thumbnail of the screen dump to the right. On the stage we have 6 buttons and they have instance names like "red", "blue" etc.

This time we call our data grid instance "data_grid":

 var data_grid:DataGrid = new DataGrid();

We firstly introduce a new way to define colums. E.g. we want to distinguish between the short internal property name ("c1") and what the users will see ("1st choice:").

 var col1:DataGridColumn = new DataGridColumn ("c1");
 col1.headerText = "1st choice:";
 data_grid.addColumn(col1);

The rest of the DataGrid definition code is more or less the same as above.

Now let's look at the buttons (and if this really new to you, you should read the Flash button tutorial). We put all the button's instance names into an array. Then we register the same "colorPick" event handling function for the mouse click event.

 // This is the list of instance names we create in CS3
 var button_list:Array = [blue,cyan,green,pink,red,yellow];
 // For all we register the same Event Handler function
 for (var i:Number=0; i<button_list.length; i++) {
   button_list[i].addEventListener(MouseEvent.CLICK, colorPick);
 }

The colorPick function does the following:

line 2: The object (button) on which the user clicked
line 4: After a user clicked on button it will be invisible
line 5: we add the picked color to the end of a list
line 7: If the user has picked three colors then we will act
line 9: Add the three picked colors to the DataGrid
line 11-13: Make all buttons visible again
line 13: Reset the list of picked colors
 1 function colorPick(evt:MouseEvent):void {
 2     var obj = evt.target;
 3     // A picked object goes hidden
 4     obj.visible = false;
 5     selected_colors.push(obj.name);
 6     // Once the user got three, we display and reset all buttons to visible
 7     if (selected_colors.length==3) {
 8         // fill in the three cols. Warning: it's the "c1" etc. property defined above
 9         data_grid.addItem({c1:selected_colors[0], c2:selected_colors[1], c3:selected_colors[2]});
10         
11         for (var i:Number=0; i<button_list.length; i++) {
12             button_list[i].visible = true;
13         }
14         selected_colors = new Array ();
15     }
16 }

Here is the complete AS code as in the downloadable *.fla file (see below).

// Import the necessary packages
import fl.controls.DataGrid;
import fl.controls.ScrollPolicy;
import fl.controls.dataGridClasses.DataGridColumn;

// --------------------- DataGrid init ----------------------------

// Now create a a new instance of DataGrid and name it "data_grid"
var data_grid:DataGrid = new DataGrid();

var col1:DataGridColumn = new DataGridColumn ("c1");
col1.headerText = "1st choice:";
var col2:DataGridColumn = new DataGridColumn ("c2");
col2.headerText = "2nd choice:";
var col3:DataGridColumn = new DataGridColumn ("c3");
col3.headerText = "3rd choice:";

data_grid.addColumn(col1);
data_grid.addColumn(col2);
data_grid.addColumn(col3);

// Fix the size
data_grid.width = 300;
// data_grid.height=300;
// Set the height to five rows
data_grid.rowCount = 5;

// Position it on the stage
data_grid.move(250, 70);

// Then add it to the stage
addChild(data_grid);

// ----------------------- Buttons code

// This is the list of instance names we create in CS3
var button_list:Array = [blue,cyan,green,pink,red,yellow];
// For all we register the same Event Handler function
for (var i:Number=0; i<button_list.length; i++) {
    button_list[i].addEventListener(MouseEvent.CLICK, colorPick);
}

// A an array of max 3 elements (i.e. what the user picked)
var selected_colors = new Array ();

function colorPick(evt:MouseEvent):void {
    var obj = evt.target;
    // A picked object goes hidden
    obj.visible = false;
    selected_colors.push(obj.name);
    // Once the user got three, we display and reset all buttons to visible
    if (selected_colors.length==3) {
        // fill in the three cols. Warning: it's the "c1" etc. property defined above
        data_grid.addItem({c1:selected_colors[0], c2:selected_colors[1], c3:selected_colors[2]});
        
        for (var i:Number=0; i<button_list.length; i++) {
            button_list[i].visible = true;
        }
        selected_colors = new Array ();
    }
}

Data Grid - using external data sources

Typically data that should go for display and editing in a data grid may sit in data structures produced by a server-side application. The best way to deal with these data sources is probably exporting/importing as XML.

The well-formed kind of XML structure you can use is list of elements with attributes or a list of elements with subelements. Translated in XML, this means that you need structure like this (element and attribute names don't matter of course as you shall see):

 <list>
  <line attr1="xxx" attr2="yyy" attr3="zzz"/>
 </list>

or

 <list>
  <line>
     <element1>xxx</element1> <element2>yyy</element2> <element3>zzz<element3>
  </line>
 </list>

A list of LMSs using elements

You first can have a look at the data-grid-xml.htmlexample. It's just a simple DataGrid table as introduced above. The only difference is that data is imported from a lms-list.xml file. The XML inside looks like this:

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<list>
  <entry>
    <Name>Moodle</Name>
    <Type>LMSware</Type>
    <License>GPL</License>
    <Description>Good for blended activity-oriented learning</Description>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <Name>PageFlakes</Name>
    <Type>Webtop service</Type>
    <License>Free to use</License>
    <Description>A minimal personal learning environment</Description>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <Name>Drupal</Name>
    <Type>Portalware</Type>
    <License>GPL</License>
    <Description>Good for project-oriented teaching</Description>
  </entry>
</list>

Here is the ActionScript code. As you can see need some lines of codes to get the XML into the table. Unless you want to do some data filtering, e.g. the XML file structure doesn't match the DataGrid strucure, you can copy/paste the code as is:

Source code
Directory: http://tecfa.unige.ch/guides/flash/ex/data-grid/
FLA file: data-grid-xml.fla

A list of LMSs using attributes

You first can have a look at the data-grid-xml-attrs.html

The AS code is exactly the same. Only, as you can see below, the XML code uses attributes instead of elements. We also changed the formatting of each entry a bit (just to see if Adobe did a good job - it did).

<?xml version="1.0"?>
<list>
  <entry
    Name="Moodle"
    Type="LMSware"
    License="GPL"
    Description="Good for blended activity-oriented learning"
    />
  <entry Name="PageFlakes" Type="Webtop service" License="Free to use" 
	 Description="A minimal personal learning environment"
	 />
  <entry 
      Name="Drupal" Type="Portalware"
      License="GPL" Description="Good for project-oriented teaching"/>
  <entry 
      Name="Blackboard" Type="LMS"
      License="Commercial" Description="Good for grading exercises"/>
</list>

We will not show the AS code here, since it's the same (except for the file name).

Source code
Directory: http://tecfa.unige.ch/guides/flash/ex/data-grid/
FLA file: data-grid-xml-attrs.fla
Moving on exercice

Generate some XML data with php that comes from a database. That's just a PhP coding exercise.

Links

Adobe tutorials
Other tutorials
Official documentation
  • DataGrid (AS3 Language and components reference)
  • fl.data Reference manual for data associated (Adobe ActionScript 3.0 Language and Components Reference)