Friday, February 24, 2017

Overriding the Default Properties of Inline Dialogs

When using inline modal, you can display them using the openModal JavaScript function.

That function is wrapping the jQuery UI Dialog Open method.
/* **********************************************
     From Theme42.js
********************************************** */
window.openModal = function(pDialogId, pDialogTriggerId, pSetFocusId, pClear) {
        $("#" + pDialogId).dialog("open")
    }

What we can do to override the default properties is to set them either on page or right before calling the Open method.

Let's say we would like to have a smaller dialog (e.g. height of 200px)


Option 1

On page load
$('#INLINE_REGION_STATIC_ID').dialog('option', 'height', 200);

Then you can use
openModal('INLINE_REGION_STATIC_ID');
or
$('#INLINE_REGION_STATIC_ID').dialog('open');

Option 2

When openning the Dialog:
$('#INLINE_REGION_STATIC_ID').dialog('option', 'height', 200).dialog('open')

For more information, you can have a look at the Dialog Widget documentation

Friday, February 3, 2017

Using Font Apex in Apex 5.0


Apex 5.1 introduced Font Apex, a new icon library designed to complement Universal Theme and to replace Font Awesome. The same "fa" prefix for the icons was kept so that it's easier to move from Font Awesome to this entirely new icon library.

Font APEX comes with a number of customizations built-in, enabling us to easily control the size, animation, rotation, and even add modifiers on top of icons. You can try customizing your icons using the Icon Builder in the Universal Theme sample application.

What if you are still on Apex 5.0 and would like to use it?

Don't worry you are able to do so.
Here's how you can do it.

First let's get the Font Apex library files.
You can get them from the Apex 5.1 installation file under the "images\libraries\font-apex" folder (or from here)
Then you will need to import these files in your application (let's do it using the Static Application Files for the sake of simplicity, but you could also import them in the Static Workspace Files or copy them on your web server).

Note: zipping the font-apex folder will enable us to upload only that zipped file instead of every single file from the folder using the zip file will also keep the folder structure.




You will end up with the following files:



Then, let's remove the Font Awesome and include the Font Apex.



Notes:
Step 4 removes the Font Awesome reference.
Step 5 uses the Font Apex CSS file reference from above step. Notice that the .min was replaced by #MIN#
From help text:
If you provide a minified version of your file you can use the substitution string #MIN# to include .min or #MIN_DIRECTORY# to include minified/ in your file URL for a regular page view and an empty string if the page is viewed in debug mode. 

At this point, if you try to run your application, you should be able to see most of the Font Apex icons.

There are some tweaks we still need to do so that everything is displayed nicely.
First, there is still a class that uses the "font-family: font-awesome;", which is used by the expand/collapse navigation menu button.

The other thing we need to change is the height of the icons.
Font Awesome uses 14x14 icons whereas Font Apex uses 16x16 icons. Some icons might not be displayed correctly. The expand/collapse navigation menu button is also one of those.

Here's the CSS that is required to fix these.

.t-Icon[class*=' fa-'],.t-Icon[class^=fa-]{
    font-family: font-apex!important;
    font-size: initial;
}

.t-TreeNav .a-TreeView-node--topLevel>.a-TreeView-content .fa{
    font-size: initial;
}

Enjoy Font Apex in your Apex 5.0 applications!

Edit 1: The Custom Prefix Class attribute needs to be set to "fa"

Edit 2: Scott Wesley has a nice followup to this: http://www.grassroots-oracle.com/2017/03/font-apex-between-versions.html