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Re: [nebula-dev] Contributing
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Hi Jeremy,
Again, I have to ask you the same things I asked Emil. I just want to
make sure we wont have any legal problems with the submissions after
they're voted on. You are the only author for the submission? If you
are not employed by an Eclipse member company, will your employer be
willing to sign an IP waiver?
CTableTree (and viewer), SearchHelper - +1
CButton seems to wrap a normal Button? I'm confused by the design. I'm
also not sure that it provides enough features above and beyond a normal
Button (especially now that Button can display an image).
-Chris
Jeremy Dowdall wrote:
Dear Nebula Team,
I have been working on custom widgets and am interested in pursuing a
contribution to the Nebula project.
the initial items:
- CTableTree
- CTableTreeViewer
- CButton
- SearchHelper
the code presently resides on SourceForge:
Project Page: http://sourceforge.net/projects/calypsorcp
CVS:
calypsorcp.cvs.sourceforge.net
/cvsroot/calypsorcp
pserver
anonymous / no password
Eclipse projects (most relevant):
- org.aspencloud.widgets & org.aspencloud.viewers
- org.aspencloud.widgets.test shows some example use code
- org.aspencloud.calypso.ui contains more subclasses of CTableTreeCell
a description of each:
CTableTree is a "Tree with Columns" as is the SWT Tree widget, and is
designed to be as pin-compatible with it, as possible. It is not
intended to be used as a grid, like KTable.
Key differences with SWT Tree:
- the tree hierarchy can be in any column ( setTreeColumn(int) )
- it can optionally display a string when empty (
setEmptyMessage(String) )
- it is built upon CTableTreeCells which can be easily customized,
subclassed, and maintained separately from the use of the actual
CTableTree. There are three base styles to start from: 1. Normal, is
like a regular SWT cell to which you set icons and text; 2. DropDown,
which creates a toggle in the "regular" cell area, along with settable
icons and text, and adds a child SWT Composite, to contain other SWT
Controls, which will expand and collapse just like an
ExpandableComposite; and 3. Simple, which puts a SWT Composite in the
main cell area to contain other SWT Controls.
- it uses CTableTreeItems to separate the cells from the table so
that CTableTreeItems can be added to the CTableTree just as SWT
TreeItems are added to an SWT Tree, with the exception that an array
of CTableTreeCell Classes are passed to the constructor to tell it how
to build its cells - what cells to use, and in what order (if there
are nulls in this array, or the length of the array is less than the
number of columns, the item automatically fills it in with
"Normal"-type cells).
CTableTreeViewer provides a JFace style viewer for using the
CTableTree, and is designed to be as pin-compatible with JFace's
TableViewer and TreeViewer as possible. With it, come some new
providers: ICTableTreeLabelProvider extends ITableLabelProvider to
allow multiple icons to be set for each column (though an
ITableLabelProvider can be used if you don't want more than one image
per cell), and ICTableTreeCellProvider which permits dynamic creation
of CTableTreeItems with the appropriate cells for the data and column.
CButton is a button that acts visibly similar to a ToolItem - the
button is drawn only when the mouse is over it - and allows the
drawing of images, text, and polygons.
SearchHelper is an auto-complete delegate that can be attached to a
Combo, ComboViewer, or Text (with the additional input of a String[]
through which to search), with a single line of code: new
SearchHelper(Combo, boolean);
sincerely,
Jeremy Dowdall
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