Many classes have shortcut names used when creating (instantiating) a class with a
configuration object. The shortcut name is referred to as an alias
(or xtype
if the
class extends Ext.Component). The alias/xtype is listed next to the class name of
applicable classes for quick reference.
Framework classes or their members may be specified as private
or protected
. Else,
the class / member is public
. Public
, protected
, and private
are access
descriptors used to convey how and when the class or class member should be used.
Public classes and class members are available for use by any other class or application code and may be relied upon as a stable and persistent within major product versions. Public classes and members may safely be extended via a subclass.
Protected class members are stable public
members intended to be used by the
owning class or its subclasses. Protected members may safely be extended via a subclass.
Private classes and class members are used internally by the framework and are not intended to be used by application developers. Private classes and members may change or be omitted from the framework at any time without notice and should not be relied upon in application logic.
static
label next to the
method name. *See Static below.Below is an example class member that we can disect to show the syntax of a class member (the lookupComponent method as viewed from the Ext.button.Button class in this case).
Let's look at each part of the member row:
lookupComponent
in this example)( item )
in this example)Ext.Component
in this case). This may be omitted for methods that do not
return anything other than undefined
or may display as multiple possible values
separated by a forward slash /
signifying that what is returned may depend on the
results of the method call (i.e. a method may return a Component if a get method calls is
successful or false
if unsuccessful which would be displayed as
Ext.Component/Boolean
).PROTECTED
in
this example - see the Flags section below)Ext.container.Container
in this example). The source
class will be displayed as a blue link if the member originates from the current class
and gray if it is inherited from an ancestor or mixed-in class.view source
in the example)item : Object
in the example).undefined
a "Returns" section
will note the type of class or object returned and a description (Ext.Component
in the
example)Available since 3.4.0
- not pictured in
the example) just after the member descriptionDefaults to: false
)The API documentation uses a number of flags to further commnicate the class member's function and intent. The label may be represented by a text label, an abbreviation, or an icon.
classInstance.method1().method2().etc();
false
is returned from
an event handler- Indicates a framework class
- A singleton framework class. *See the singleton flag for more information
- A component-type framework class (any class within the Ext JS framework that extends Ext.Component)
- Indicates that the class, member, or guide is new in the currently viewed version
- Indicates a class member of type config
- Indicates a class member of type property
- Indicates a class member of type
method
- Indicates a class member of type event
- Indicates a class member of type
theme variable
- Indicates a class member of type
theme mixin
- Indicates that the class, member, or guide is new in the currently viewed version
Just below the class name on an API doc page is a row of buttons corresponding to the types of members owned by the current class. Each button shows a count of members by type (this count is updated as filters are applied). Clicking the button will navigate you to that member section. Hovering over the member-type button will reveal a popup menu of all members of that type for quick navigation.
Getting and setter methods that correlate to a class config option will show up in the methods section as well as in the configs section of both the API doc and the member-type menus just beneath the config they work with. The getter and setter method documentation will be found in the config row for easy reference.
Your page history is kept in localstorage and displayed (using the available real estate) just below the top title bar. By default, the only search results shown are the pages matching the product / version you're currently viewing. You can expand what is displayed by clicking on the button on the right-hand side of the history bar and choosing the "All" radio option. This will show all recent pages in the history bar for all products / versions.
Within the history config menu you will also see a listing of your recent page visits. The results are filtered by the "Current Product / Version" and "All" radio options. Clicking on the button will clear the history bar as well as the history kept in local storage.
If "All" is selected in the history config menu the checkbox option for "Show product details in the history bar" will be enabled. When checked, the product/version for each historic page will show alongside the page name in the history bar. Hovering the cursor over the page names in the history bar will also show the product/version as a tooltip.
Both API docs and guides can be searched for using the search field at the top of the page.
On API doc pages there is also a filter input field that filters the member rows using the filter string. In addition to filtering by string you can filter the class members by access level, inheritance, and read only. This is done using the checkboxes at the top of the page.
The checkbox at the bottom of the API class navigation tree filters the class list to include or exclude private classes.
Clicking on an empty search field will show your last 10 searches for quick navigation.
Each API doc page (with the exception of Javascript primitives pages) has a menu view of metadata relating to that class. This metadata view will have one or more of the following:
Ext.button.Button
class has an alternate class name of Ext.Button
). Alternate class
names are commonly maintained for backward compatibility.Runnable examples (Fiddles) are expanded on a page by default. You can collapse and expand example code blocks individually using the arrow on the top-left of the code block. You can also toggle the collapse state of all examples using the toggle button on the top-right of the page. The toggle-all state will be remembered between page loads.
Class members are collapsed on a page by default. You can expand and collapse members using the arrow icon on the left of the member row or globally using the expand / collapse all toggle button top-right.
Viewing the docs on narrower screens or browsers will result in a view optimized for a smaller form factor. The primary differences between the desktop and "mobile" view are:
The class source can be viewed by clicking on the class name at the top of an API doc page. The source for class members can be viewed by clicking on the "view source" link on the right-hand side of the member row.
This type of store is a replacement for BufferedStore at least for Modern. The primary use of this store is to create and manage "active ranges" of records.
For example:
var range = store.createActiveRange({
begin: 100,
end: 200,
prefetch: true, // allow prefetching beyond range
callback: 'onRangeUpdate',
scope: this
});
// Navigate to a different range. This will causes pages to load and
// the onRangeUpdate method will be called as the load(s) progress.
// This can change the length or number of records spanned on each
// call.
//
range.goto(300, 400);
onRangeUpdate: function (range, begin, end) {
// Called when records appear in the range...
// We can check if all things are loaded:
// Or we can use range.records (sparsely populated)
}
This defaults to true
when this store's cfg-proxy is asynchronous,
such as an Ext.data.proxy.Ajax.
When the proxy is synchronous, such as a Ext.data.proxy.Memory memory
proxy, this defaults to false
.
NOTE: This does not cause synchronous Ajax requests if configured false
when an Ajax proxy is used. It causes immediate issuing of an Ajax request
when method-load is called rather than issuing the request at the end
of the current event handler run.
What this means is that when using an Ajax proxy, calls to method-load do not fire the request to the remote resource immediately, but schedule a request to be made. This is so that multiple requests are not fired when mutating a store's remote filters and sorters (as happens during state restoration). The request is made only once after all relevant store state is fully set.
Defaults to:
undefined
Available since: 6.0.1
Sets the value of asynchronousLoad
asynchronousLoad : Boolean
When a Store is used by only one Ext.view.View, and should only exist
for the lifetime of that view, then configure the autoDestroy flag as true
. This
causes the destruction of the view to trigger the destruction of its Store.
Defaults to:
undefined
If data is not specified, and if autoLoad is true or an Object, this store's load method is automatically called after creation. If the value of autoLoad is an Object, this Object will be passed to the store's load method.
It's important to note that Ext.data.TreeStore will load regardless of autoLoad's value if expand is set to true on the root node.
Defaults to:
undefined
Available since: 2.3.0
true
to maintain sorted order when records
are added regardless of requested insertion point, or when an item mutation
results in a new sort position.
This does not affect a ChainedStore's reaction to mutations of the source Store. If sorters are present when the source Store is mutated, this ChainedStore's sort order will always be maintained.
Defaults to:
true
True to automatically sync the Store with its Proxy after every edit to one of its Records. Defaults to false.
Defaults to:
false
Sets the updating behavior based on batch synchronization. 'operation' (the default) will update the Store's internal representation of the data after each operation of the batch has completed, 'complete' will wait until the entire batch has been completed before updating the Store's data. 'complete' is a good choice for local storage proxies, 'operation' is better for remote proxies, where there is a comparatively high latency.
Defaults to:
'operation'
Sets the value of batchUpdateMode
batchUpdateMode : String
An Array of Ext.data.field.Field
config objects, simply the field
name, or a mix of config objects and strings.
If just a name is given, the field type defaults to auto
.
In a Ext.data.field.Field config object you may pass the alias of
the Ext.data.field.*
type using the type
config option.
// two fields are set:
// - an 'auto' field with a name of 'firstName'
// - and an Ext.data.field.Integer field with a name of 'age'
fields: ['firstName', {
type: 'int',
name: 'age'
}]
Fields will automatically be created at read time for any for any keys in the
data passed to the Model's proxy's
Ext.data.reader.Reader whose name is not explicitly configured in
the fields
config.
Extending a Model class will inherit all the fields
from the superclass /
ancestor classes.
Note: In general, this configuration option should only be used
for simple stores like a two-field store of
Ext.form.field.ComboBox. For anything more complicated, such
as specifying a particular id property or associations, a
Ext.data.Model should be defined and specified for the
model config.
Defaults to:
null
Available since: 2.3.0
Array of Ext.util.Filter for this store. Can also be an array of functions which will be used as the filterFn config for filters:
filters: [
function(item) {
return item.weight > 0;
}
]
Individual filters can be specified as an Ext.util.Filter
instance, a config
object for Ext.util.Filter
or simply a function that will be wrapped in a
instance with its filterFn set.
If a Collection
of filters is passed, its items (filters) will be added. Any
subsequent modification to the collection will have no affect.
For fine grain control of the filters collection, call getFilters
to return
the Ext.util.Collection
instance that holds this store's filters.
var filters = store.getFilters(); // an Ext.util.FilterCollection
function legalAge (item) {
return item.age >= 21;
}
filters.add(legalAge);
//...
filters.remove(legalAge);
Any changes to the filters
collection will cause this store to adjust
its items accordingly.
Defaults to:
null
Gets the filters for this store.
The filters
The direction in which sorting should be applied when grouping. Supported values are "ASC" and "DESC".
Defaults to:
'ASC'
The grouper by which to group the data store. May also be specified by the groupField config, however they should not be used together.
Defaults to:
null
The field by which to group data in the store. Internally, grouping is very similar to sorting - the groupField and groupDir are injected as the first sorter (see method-sort). Stores support a single level of grouping, and groups can be fetched via the getGroups method.
Defaults to:
undefined
The number of records to fetch beyond the active range in the direction of
movement. If the range is advancing forward, the additional records are beyond
end
. If advancing backwards, they are before begin
.
Defaults to:
200
Sets the value of leadingBufferZone
leadingBufferZone : Number
A config object containing one or more event handlers to be added to this object during initialization. This should be a valid listeners config object as specified in the addListener example for attaching multiple handlers at once.
DOM events from Ext JS Ext.Component
While some Ext JS Component classes export selected DOM events (e.g. "click",
"mouseover" etc), this is usually only done when extra value can be added. For example
the Ext.view.Views itemclick
event passing the node clicked on. To access DOM events directly from a child element
of a Component, we need to specify the element
option to identify the Component
property to add a DOM listener to:
new Ext.panel.Panel({
width: 400,
height: 200,
dockedItems: [{
xtype: 'toolbar'
}],
listeners: {
click: {
element: 'el', //bind to the underlying el property on the panel
fn: function(){ console.log('click el'); }
},
dblclick: {
element: 'body', //bind to the underlying body property on the panel
fn: function(){ console.log('dblclick body'); }
}
}
});
An alias for addListener. In versions prior to 5.1, listeners had a generated setter which could be called to add listeners. In 5.1 the listeners config is not processed using the config system and has no generated setter, so this method is provided for backward compatibility. The preferred way of adding listeners is to use the on method.
listeners : Object
The listeners
Name of the Ext.data.Model associated with this store. See Ext.data.Model#entityName.
May also be the actual Model subclass.
This config is required for the store to be able to read data unless you have
defined the fields config which will create an anonymous
Ext.data.Model
.
Defaults to:
undefined
The number of records considered to form a 'page'. This is used to power the built-in paging using the nextPage and previousPage functions when the grid is paged using a Ext.toolbar.Paging Defaults to 25.
To disable paging, set the pageSize to 0
.
Defaults to:
25
The Proxy to use for this Store. This can be either a string, a config object or a Proxy instance - see setProxy for details.
Defaults to:
undefined
Available since: 1.1.0
Set this to true
to trigger a reload when the last sorter is removed (only
applicable when remoteSort is true
).
By default, the store reloads itself when a sorter is added or removed.
When the last sorter is removed, however, the assumption is that the data does not need to become "unsorted", and so no reload is triggered.
If the server has a default order to which it reverts in the absence of any
sorters, then it is useful to set this config to true
.
Defaults to:
false
Available since: 6.5.1
Sets the value of reloadOnClearSorters
reloadOnClearSorters : Boolean
true
to defer any filtering operation to the server. If false
, filtering is done
locally on the client.
Defaults to:
true
true
if the sorting should be performed on the server side, false if it is local only.
Defaults to:
true
The initial set of Ext.util.Sorter
Individual sorters can be specified as an Ext.util.Sorter
instance, a config
object for Ext.util.Sorter
or simply the name of a property by which to sort.
An alternative way to extend the sorters is to call the sort
method and pass
a property or sorter config to add to the sorters.
For fine grain control of the sorters collection, call getSorters
to return
the Ext.util.Collection
instance that holds this collection's sorters.
var sorters = store.getSorters(); // an Ext.util.SorterCollection
sorters.add('name');
//...
sorters.remove('name');
Any changes to the sorters
collection will cause this store to adjust
its items accordingly.
Defaults to:
null
Gets the sorters for this store.
The sorters
If true, any sorters attached to this Store will be run after loading data, before the datachanged event is fired. Defaults to true, ignored if remoteSort is true
Defaults to:
false
Configure as true
to have the filters saved when a client Ext.grid.Panel
saves its state.
Defaults to:
false
Sets the value of statefulFilters
statefulFilters : Boolean
Unique identifier for this store. If present, this Store will be registered with the Ext.data.StoreManager, making it easy to reuse elsewhere.
Note that when a store is instantiated by a Controller, the storeId will default to the name of the store if not specified in the class.
Defaults to:
null
This config controls whether removed records are remembered by this store for later saving to the server.
Defaults to:
false
The number of records to fetch beyond the active trailing the direction of
movement. If the range is advancing forward, the additional records are before
begin
. If advancing backwards, they are beyond end
.
Defaults to:
50
Sets the value of trailingBufferZone
trailingBufferZone : Number
The value true
causes config
values to be stored on instances using a
property name prefixed with an underscore ("_") character. A value of false
stores config
values as properties using their exact name (no prefix).
Defaults to:
true
Available since: 5.0.0
The value true
instructs the initConfig
method to only honor values for
properties declared in the config
block of a class. When false
, properties
that are not declared in a config
block will be placed on the instance.
Defaults to:
true
Available since: 5.0.0
A prototype-chained object storing transform method names and priorities stored on the class prototype. On first instantiation, this object is converted into an array that is sorted by priority and stored on the constructor.
Defaults to:
{}
Matches options property names within a listeners specification object - property names which are never used as event names.
Defaults to:
{ scope: 1, delay: 1, buffer: 1, onFrame: 1, single: 1, args: 1, destroyable: 1, priority: 1, order: 1 }
We don't want the base destructor to clear the prototype because our destroyObservable handler must be called the very last. It will take care of the prototype after completing Observable destruction sequence.
Defaults to:
true
true
indicates an id
was auto-generated rather than provided by configuration.
Defaults to:
false
Available since: 6.7.0
Setting this property to false
will prevent nulling object references
on a Class instance after destruction. Setting this to "async"
will delay
the clearing for approx 50ms.
Defaults to:
true
Available since: 6.2.0
Setting this property to true
will result in setting the object's
prototype to null
after the destruction sequence is fully completed.
After that, most attempts at calling methods on the object instance
will result in "method not defined" exception. This can be very helpful
with tracking down otherwise hard to find bugs like runaway Ajax requests,
timed functions not cleared on destruction, etc.
Note that this option can only work in browsers that support Object.setPrototypeOf
method, and is only available in debugging mode.
Defaults to:
false
Available since: 6.2.0
This property is set to true
after the destroy
method is called.
Defaults to:
false
Perform the Store destroying sequence. Override this method to add destruction behaviors to your custom Stores.
Defaults to:
Ext.emptyFn
Initial suspended call count. Incremented when suspendEvents is called, decremented when resumeEvents is called.
Defaults to:
0
If this property is specified by the target class of this mixin its properties are
used to configure the created Ext.Factory
.
This object holds a key for any event that has a listener. The listener may be set directly on the instance, or on its class or a super class (via observe) or on the Ext.app.EventBus. The values of this object are truthy (a non-zero number) and falsy (0 or undefined). They do not represent an exact count of listeners. The value for an event is truthy if the event must be fired and is falsy if there is no need to fire the event.
The intended use of this property is to avoid the expense of fireEvent calls when there are no listeners. This can be particularly helpful when one would otherwise have to call fireEvent hundreds or thousands of times. It is used like this:
if (this.hasListeners.foo) {
this.fireEvent('foo', this, arg1);
}
The class name of the model that this store uses if no explicit model is given
Defaults to:
'Ext.data.Model'
This property is set to true
during the call to initConfig
.
Defaults to:
false
Available since: 5.0.0
This property is set to true
if this instance is the first of its class.
Defaults to:
false
Available since: 5.0.0
This value is true
and is used to identify plain objects from instances of
a defined class.
Defaults to:
true
true
in this class to identify an object as an instantiated Observable, or subclass
thereof.
Defaults to:
true
true
in this class to identify an object as an instantiated Store, or subclass thereof.
Defaults to:
true
Property to hold the last options from a method-load method call. This object is used for the method-reload to reuse the same options. Please see method-reload for a simple example on how to use the lastOptions property.
Temporary cache in which removed model instances are kept until successfully synchronised with a Proxy, at which point this is cleared.
This cache is maintained unless you set trackRemoved
to false
.
Defaults to:
null
Get the reference to the current class from which this object was instantiated. Unlike
Ext.Base#statics, this.self
is scope-dependent and it's meant to be used
for dynamic inheritance. See Ext.Base#statics for a detailed comparison
Ext.define('My.Cat', {
statics: {
speciesName: 'Cat' // My.Cat.speciesName = 'Cat'
},
constructor: function() {
alert(this.self.speciesName); // dependent on 'this'
},
clone: function() {
return new this.self();
}
});
Ext.define('My.SnowLeopard', {
extend: 'My.Cat',
statics: {
speciesName: 'Snow Leopard' // My.SnowLeopard.speciesName = 'Snow Leopard'
}
});
var cat = new My.Cat(); // alerts 'Cat'
var snowLeopard = new My.SnowLeopard(); // alerts 'Snow Leopard'
var clone = snowLeopard.clone();
alert(Ext.getClassName(clone)); // alerts 'My.SnowLeopard'
Defaults to:
Base
A counter that is increased by beginUpdate
and decreased by endUpdate
. When
this transitions from 0 to 1 the beginupdate
event is
fired. When it transitions back from 1 to 0 the endupdate
event is fired.
Defaults to:
0
Available since: 5.0.0
Adds declarative listeners as nested arrays of listener objects.
listeners : Array
true
if any listeners were added
This method applies a versioned, deprecation declaration to this class. This
is typically called by the deprecated
config.
deprecations : Object
Adds a new Filter to this Store's filter set and by default, applies the updated filter set to the Store's unfiltered dataset.
filters : Object[]/Ext.util.Filter[]
The set of filters to add to the current filter set.
suppressEvent : Boolean (optional)
If true
the filter is cleared silently.
The on method is shorthand for addListener.
Appends an event handler to this object. For example:
myGridPanel.on("itemclick", this.onItemClick, this);
The method also allows for a single argument to be passed which is a config object containing properties which specify multiple events. For example:
myGridPanel.on({
cellclick: this.onCellClick,
select: this.onSelect,
viewready: this.onViewReady,
scope: this // Important. Ensure "this" is correct during handler execution
});
One can also specify options for each event handler separately:
myGridPanel.on({
cellclick: {fn: this.onCellClick, scope: this, single: true},
viewready: {fn: panel.onViewReady, scope: panel}
});
Names of methods in a specified scope may also be used:
myGridPanel.on({
cellclick: {fn: 'onCellClick', scope: this, single: true},
viewready: {fn: 'onViewReady', scope: panel}
});
eventName : String/Object
The name of the event to listen for. May also be an object who's property names are event names.
fn : Function/String (optional)
The method the event invokes or the name of
the method within the specified scope
. Will be called with arguments
given to Ext.util.Observable#fireEvent plus the options
parameter described
below.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is
executed. If omitted, defaults to the object which fired the event.
options : Object (optional)
An object containing handler configuration.
Note: The options object will also be passed as the last argument to every event handler.
This object may contain any of the following properties:
scope : Object
The scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is executed. If omitted,
defaults to the object which fired the event.
delay : Number
The number of milliseconds to delay the invocation of the handler after the event fires.
single : Boolean
True to add a handler to handle just the next firing of the event, and then remove itself.
buffer : Number
Causes the handler to be scheduled to run in an Ext.util.DelayedTask delayed by the specified number of milliseconds. If the event fires again within that time, the original handler is not invoked, but the new handler is scheduled in its place.
onFrame : Number
Causes the handler to be scheduled to run at the next animation frame event. If the event fires again before that time, the handler is not rescheduled - the handler will only be called once when the next animation frame is fired, with the last set of arguments passed.
target : Ext.util.Observable
Only call the handler if the event was fired on the target Observable, not if the event was bubbled up from a child Observable.
element : String
This option is only valid for listeners bound to Ext.Component. The name of a Component property which references an Ext.dom.Element to add a listener to.
This option is useful during Component construction to add DOM event listeners to elements of Ext.Component which will exist only after the Component is rendered.
For example, to add a click listener to a Panel's body:
var panel = new Ext.panel.Panel({
title: 'The title',
listeners: {
click: this.handlePanelClick,
element: 'body'
}
});
In order to remove listeners attached using the element, you'll need to reference the element itself as seen below.
panel.body.un(...)
delegate : String (optional)
A simple selector to filter the event target or look for a descendant of the target.
The "delegate" option is only available on Ext.dom.Element instances (or when attaching a listener to a Ext.dom.Element via a Component using the element option).
See the delegate example below.
capture : Boolean (optional)
When set to true
, the listener is fired in the capture phase of the event propagation
sequence, instead of the default bubble phase.
The capture
option is only available on Ext.dom.Element instances (or
when attaching a listener to a Ext.dom.Element via a Component using the
element option).
stopPropagation : Boolean (optional)
This option is only valid for listeners bound to Ext.dom.Element.
true
to call stopPropagation on the event
object before firing the handler.
preventDefault : Boolean (optional)
This option is only valid for listeners bound to Ext.dom.Element.
true
to call preventDefault on the event
object before firing the handler.
stopEvent : Boolean (optional)
This option is only valid for listeners bound to Ext.dom.Element.
true
to call stopEvent on the event object
before firing the handler.
args : Array (optional)
Optional set of arguments to pass to the handler function before the actual
fired event arguments. For example, if args
is set to ['foo', 42]
,
the event handler function will be called with an arguments list like this:
handler('foo', 42, <actual event arguments>...);
destroyable : Boolean (optional)
When specified as true
, the function returns a destroyable
object. An object
which implements the destroy
method which removes all listeners added in this call.
This syntax can be a helpful shortcut to using un; particularly when
removing multiple listeners. NOTE - not compatible when using the element
option. See un for the proper syntax for removing listeners added using the
element config.
Defaults to:
false
priority : Number (optional)
An optional numeric priority that determines the order in which event handlers are run. Event handlers with no priority will be run as if they had a priority of 0. Handlers with a higher priority will be prioritized to run sooner than those with a lower priority. Negative numbers can be used to set a priority lower than the default. Internally, the framework uses a range of 1000 or greater, and -1000 or lesser for handlers that are intended to run before or after all others, so it is recommended to stay within the range of -999 to 999 when setting the priority of event handlers in application-level code. A priority must be an integer to be valid. Fractional values are reserved for internal framework use.
order : String (optional)
A legacy option that is provided for backward compatibility.
It is recommended to use the priority
option instead. Available options are:
'before'
: equal to a priority of 100
'current'
: equal to a priority of 0
or default priority'after'
: equal to a priority of -100
Defaults to:
'current'
order : String (optional)
A shortcut for the order
event option. Provided for backward compatibility.
Please use the priority
event option instead.
Defaults to: 'current'
Only when the destroyable
option is specified.
A Destroyable
object. An object which implements the destroy
method which removes
all listeners added in this call. For example:
this.btnListeners = = myButton.on({
destroyable: true
mouseover: function() { console.log('mouseover'); },
mouseout: function() { console.log('mouseout'); },
click: function() { console.log('click'); }
});
And when those listeners need to be removed:
Ext.destroy(this.btnListeners);
or
this.btnListeners.destroy();
The addManagedListener method is used when some object (call it "A") is listening to an event on another observable object ("B") and you want to remove that listener from "B" when "A" is destroyed. This is not an issue when "B" is destroyed because all of its listeners will be removed at that time.
Example:
Ext.define('Foo', {
extend: 'Ext.Component',
initComponent: function () {
this.addManagedListener(MyApp.SomeSharedMenu, 'show', this.doSomething);
this.callParent();
}
});
As you can see, when an instance of Foo is destroyed, it ensures that the 'show'
listener on the menu (MyApp.SomeGlobalSharedMenu
) is also removed.
As of version 5.1 it is no longer necessary to use this method in most cases because
listeners are automatically managed if the scope object provided to
addListener is an Observable instance.
However, if the observable instance and scope are not the same object you
still need to use mon
or addManagedListener
if you want the listener to be
managed.
item : Ext.util.Observable/Ext.dom.Element
The item to which to add a listener/listeners.
ename : Object/String
The event name, or an object containing event name properties.
fn : Function/String (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event
name, this is the handler function or the name of a method on the specified
scope
.
scope : Object (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event name, this is
the scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is executed.
options : Object (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event name, this is
the addListener options.
Only when the destroyable
option is specified.
A Destroyable
object. An object which implements the destroy
method which removes
all listeners added in this call. For example:
this.btnListeners = myButton.mon({
destroyable: true
mouseover: function() { console.log('mouseover'); },
mouseout: function() { console.log('mouseout'); },
click: function() { console.log('click'); }
});
And when those listeners need to be removed:
Ext.destroy(this.btnListeners);
or
this.btnListeners.destroy();
A model instance should call this method on the Store it has been joined to.
Available since: 3.4.0
record : Ext.data.Model
The model instance that was edited.
A model instance should call this method on the Store it has been joined to.
Available since: 3.4.0
record : Ext.data.Model
The model instance that was edited
This method may be called to indicate the start of multiple changes to the store.
Automatic synchronization as configured by the autoSync flag is deferred until the endUpdate method is called, so multiple mutations can be coalesced into one synchronization operation.
Internally this method increments a counter that is decremented by endUpdate
. It
is important, therefore, that if you call beginUpdate
directly you match that
call with a call to endUpdate
or you will prevent the collection from updating
properly.
For example:
var store = Ext.StoreManager.lookup({
//...
autoSync: true
});
store.beginUpdate();
record.set('fieldName', 'newValue');
store.add(item);
// ...
store.insert(index, otherItem);
//...
// Interested parties will listen for the endupdate event
store.endUpdate();
Available since: 5.0.0
Call the original method that was previously overridden with Ext.Base#override
Ext.define('My.Cat', {
constructor: function() {
alert("I'm a cat!");
}
});
My.Cat.override({
constructor: function() {
alert("I'm going to be a cat!");
this.callOverridden();
alert("Meeeeoooowwww");
}
});
var kitty = new My.Cat(); // alerts "I'm going to be a cat!"
// alerts "I'm a cat!"
// alerts "Meeeeoooowwww"
args : Array/Arguments
The arguments, either an array or the arguments
object
from the current method, for example: this.callOverridden(arguments)
Returns the result of calling the overridden method
Deprecated since version 4.1.0
Use method-callParent instead.
Call the "parent" method of the current method. That is the method previously overridden by derivation or by an override (see Ext#define).
Ext.define('My.Base', {
constructor: function(x) {
this.x = x;
},
statics: {
method: function(x) {
return x;
}
}
});
Ext.define('My.Derived', {
extend: 'My.Base',
constructor: function() {
this.callParent([21]);
}
});
var obj = new My.Derived();
alert(obj.x); // alerts 21
This can be used with an override as follows:
Ext.define('My.DerivedOverride', {
override: 'My.Derived',
constructor: function(x) {
this.callParent([x*2]); // calls original My.Derived constructor
}
});
var obj = new My.Derived();
alert(obj.x); // now alerts 42
This also works with static and private methods.
Ext.define('My.Derived2', {
extend: 'My.Base',
// privates: {
statics: {
method: function(x) {
return this.callParent([x*2]); // calls My.Base.method
}
}
});
alert(My.Base.method(10)); // alerts 10
alert(My.Derived2.method(10)); // alerts 20
Lastly, it also works with overridden static methods.
Ext.define('My.Derived2Override', {
override: 'My.Derived2',
// privates: {
statics: {
method: function(x) {
return this.callParent([x*2]); // calls My.Derived2.method
}
}
});
alert(My.Derived2.method(10); // now alerts 40
To override a method and replace it and also call the superclass method, use method-callSuper. This is often done to patch a method to fix a bug.
args : Array/Arguments
The arguments, either an array or the arguments
object
from the current method, for example: this.callParent(arguments)
Returns the result of calling the parent method
This method is used by an override to call the superclass method but bypass any overridden method. This is often done to "patch" a method that contains a bug but for whatever reason cannot be fixed directly.
Consider:
Ext.define('Ext.some.Class', {
method: function() {
console.log('Good');
}
});
Ext.define('Ext.some.DerivedClass', {
extend: 'Ext.some.Class',
method: function() {
console.log('Bad');
// ... logic but with a bug ...
this.callParent();
}
});
To patch the bug in Ext.some.DerivedClass.method
, the typical solution is to create an
override:
Ext.define('App.patches.DerivedClass', {
override: 'Ext.some.DerivedClass',
method: function() {
console.log('Fixed');
// ... logic but with bug fixed ...
this.callSuper();
}
});
The patch method cannot use method-callParent to call the superclass
method
since that would call the overridden method containing the bug. In
other words, the above patch would only produce "Fixed" then "Good" in the
console log, whereas, using callParent
would produce "Fixed" then "Bad"
then "Good".
args : Array/Arguments
The arguments, either an array or the arguments
object
from the current method, for example: this.callSuper(arguments)
Returns the result of calling the superclass method
Reverts to a view of the Record cache with no filtering applied.
suppressEvent : Boolean (optional)
If true
the filter is cleared silently.
For a locally filtered Store, this means that the filter collection is cleared without firing the datachanged event.
For a remotely filtered Store, this means that the filter collection is cleared, but the store is not reloaded from the server.
Checks if a record is in the current active data set.
record : Ext.data.Model
The record
true
if the record is in the current active data set.
Create a Range
instance to access records by their index.
Available since: 6.5.0
config : Object/Ext.data.virtual.Range (optional)
Creates an event handling function which re-fires the event from this object as the passed event name.
newName : String
The name under which to re-fire the passed parameters.
beginEnd : Array (optional)
The caller can specify on which indices to slice.
This method is called to cleanup an object and its resources. After calling this method, the object should not be used any further in any way, including access to its methods and properties.
To prevent potential memory leaks, all object references will be nulled
at the end of destruction sequence, unless clearPropertiesOnDestroy
is set to false
.
Destroys member properties by name.
If a property name is the name of a config, the getter is not invoked, so if the config has not been initialized, nothing will be done.
The property will be destroyed, and the corrected name (if the property is a config
and config names are prefixed) will set to null
in this object's dictionary.
args : String...
One or more names of the properties to destroy and remove from the object.
Continue to fire event.
eventName : String
args : Array
bubbles : Boolean
Enables events fired by this Observable to bubble up an owner hierarchy by calling
this.getBubbleTarget()
if present. There is no implementation in the Observable
base class.
This is commonly used by Ext.Components to bubble events to owner Containers. See Ext.Component#getBubbleTarget. The default implementation in Ext.Component returns the Component's immediate owner. But if a known target is required, this can be overridden to access the required target more quickly.
Example:
Ext.define('Ext.overrides.form.field.Base', {
override: 'Ext.form.field.Base',
// Add functionality to Field's initComponent to enable
// the change event to bubble
initComponent: function () {
this.callParent();
this.enableBubble('change');
}
});
var myForm = Ext.create('Ext.form.Panel', {
title: 'User Details',
items: [{
...
}],
listeners: {
change: function() {
// Title goes red if form has been modified.
myForm.header.setStyle('color', 'red');
}
}
});
eventNames : String/String[]
The event name to bubble, or an Array of event names.
This method is called after modifications are complete on a store. For details
see beginUpdate
.
Available since: 5.0.0
Filters the data in the Store by one or more fields. Example usage:
//filter with a single field
myStore.filter('firstName', 'Don');
//filtering with multiple filters
myStore.filter([
{
property : 'firstName',
value : 'Don'
},
{
property : 'lastName',
value : 'Griffin'
}
]);
Internally, Store converts the passed arguments into an array of Ext.util.Filter instances, and delegates the actual filtering to its internal Ext.util.Collection or the remote server.
filters : String/Ext.util.Filter[] (optional)
Either a string name of one of the fields in this Store's configured Ext.data.Model, or an array of filter configurations.
value : String (optional)
The property value by which to filter. Only applicable if
filters
is a string.
Filters by a function. The specified function will be called for each
Record in this Store. If the function returns true
the Record is included,
otherwise it is filtered out.
When store is filtered, most of the methods for accessing store data will be working only within the set of filtered records. The notable exception is getById.
fn : Function
The function to be called. It will be passed the following parameters:
record : Ext.data.Model
The record to test for filtering. Access field values using Ext.data.Model#get.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope (this reference) in which the function is executed. Defaults to this Store.
Finds the index of the first matching Record in this store by a specific field value.
When store is filtered, finds records only within filter.
IMPORTANT
If this store is Ext.data.BufferedStore, this can ONLY find records which happen to be cached in the page cache. This will be parts of the dataset around the currently visible zone, or recently visited zones if the pages have not yet been purged from the cache.
property : String
The name of the Record field to test.
value : String/RegExp
Either a string that the field value should begin with, or a RegExp to test against the field.
startIndex : Number (optional)
The index to start searching at
Defaults to: 0
anyMatch : Boolean (optional)
True to match any part of the string, not just the beginning.
Defaults to: false
caseSensitive : Boolean (optional)
True for case sensitive comparison
Defaults to: false
exactMatch : Boolean (optional)
True to force exact match (^ and $ characters
added to the regex). Ignored if anyMatch
is true
.
Defaults to: false
The matched index or -1
Find the index of the first matching Record in this Store by a function.
If the function returns true
it is considered a match.
When store is filtered, finds records only within filter.
IMPORTANT
If this store is Ext.data.BufferedStore, this can ONLY find records which happen to be cached in the page cache. This will be parts of the dataset around the currently visible zone, or recently visited zones if the pages have not yet been purged from the cache.
fn : Function
The function to be called. It will be passed the following parameters:
record : Ext.data.Model
The record to test for filtering. Access field values using Ext.data.Model#get.
id : Object
The ID of the Record passed.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope (this reference) in which the function is executed. Defaults to this Store.
start : Number (optional)
The index at which to start searching.
Defaults to: 0
The matched index or -1
Finds the index of the first matching Record in this store by a specific field value.
When store is filtered, finds records only within filter.
IMPORTANT
If this store is Ext.data.BufferedStore, this can ONLY find records which happen to be cached in the page cache. This will be parts of the dataset around the currently visible zone, or recently visited zones if the pages have not yet been purged from the cache.
fieldName : String
The name of the Record field to test.
value : Object
The value to match the field against.
startIndex : Number (optional)
The index to start searching at
Defaults to: 0
The matched index or -1
Finds the first matching Record in this store by a specific field value.
When store is filtered, finds records only within filter.
IMPORTANT
If this store is Ext.data.BufferedStore, this can ONLY find records which happen to be cached in the page cache. This will be parts of the dataset around the currently visible zone, or recently visited zones if the pages have not yet been purged from the cache.
fieldName : String
The name of the Record field to test.
value : String/RegExp
Either a string that the field value should begin with, or a RegExp to test against the field.
startIndex : Number (optional)
The index to start searching at
Defaults to: 0
anyMatch : Boolean (optional)
True to match any part of the string, not just the beginning.
Defaults to: false
caseSensitive : Boolean (optional)
True for case sensitive comparison
Defaults to: false
exactMatch : Boolean (optional)
True to force exact match (^ and $ characters
added to the regex). Ignored if anyMatch
is true
.
Defaults to: false
The matched record or null
Fires the specified event with the passed parameters and executes a function (action).
By default, the action function will be executed after any "before" event handlers
(as specified using the order
option of
addListener
), but before any other
handlers are fired. This gives the "before" handlers an opportunity to
cancel the event by returning false
, and prevent the action function from
being called.
The action can also be configured to run after normal handlers, but before any "after"
handlers (as specified using the order
event option) by passing 'after'
as the order
parameter. This configuration gives any event handlers except
for "after" handlers the opportunity to cancel the event and prevent the action
function from being called.
eventName : String
The name of the event to fire.
args : Array
Arguments to pass to handlers and to the action function.
fn : Function
The action function.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is
executed. If omitted, defaults to the object which fired the event.
options : Object (optional)
Event options for the action function. Accepts any
of the options of addListener
order : String (optional)
The order to call the action function relative
too the event handlers ('before'
or 'after'
). Note that this option is
simply used to sort the action function relative to the event handlers by "priority".
An order of 'before'
is equivalent to a priority of 99.5
, while an order of
'after'
is equivalent to a priority of -99.5
. See the priority
option
of addListener
for more details.
Defaults to: 'before'
Deprecated since version 5.5
Use fireEventedAction instead.
Fires the specified event with the passed parameters (minus the event name, plus
the options
object passed to addListener).
An event may be set to bubble up an Observable parent hierarchy (See Ext.Component#getBubbleTarget) by calling enableBubble.
eventName : String
The name of the event to fire.
args : Object...
Variable number of parameters are passed to handlers.
returns false if any of the handlers return false otherwise it returns true.
Fires the specified event with the passed parameter list.
An event may be set to bubble up an Observable parent hierarchy (See Ext.Component#getBubbleTarget) by calling enableBubble.
eventName : String
The name of the event to fire.
args : Object[]
An array of parameters which are passed to handlers.
returns false if any of the handlers return false otherwise it returns true.
Fires the specified event with the passed parameters and executes a function (action). Evented Actions will automatically dispatch a 'before' event passing. This event will be given a special controller that allows for pausing/resuming of the event flow.
By pausing the controller the updater and events will not run until resumed. Pausing, however, will not stop the processing of any other before events.
eventName : String
The name of the event to fire.
args : Array
Arguments to pass to handlers and to the action function.
fn : Function/String
The action function.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is
executed. If omitted, defaults to the object which fired the event.
fnArgs : Array/Boolean (optional)
Optional arguments for the action fn
. If not
given, the normal args
will be used to call fn
. If false
is passed, the
args
are used but if the first argument is this instance it will be removed
from the args passed to the action function.
Get the Record at the specified index.
The index is effected by filtering.
index : Number
The index of the Record to find.
The Record at the passed index. Returns null if not found.
Returns an object which is passed in as the listeners argument to proxy.batch inside this.sync. This is broken out into a separate function to allow for customisation of the listeners
The listeners object
Gets the bubbling parent for an Observable
The bubble parent. null is returned if no bubble target exists
Get the Record with the specified id.
This method is not affected by filtering, lookup will be performed from all records inside the store, filtered or not.
id : Mixed
The id of the Record to find.
The Record with the passed id. Returns null if not found.
Returns a specified config property value. If the name parameter is not passed, all current configuration options will be returned as key value pairs.
name : String (optional)
The name of the config property to get.
peek : Boolean (optional)
true
to peek at the raw value without calling the getter.
Defaults to: false
ifInitialized : Boolean (optional)
true
to only return the initialized property
value, not the raw config value, and not to trigger initialization. Returns
undefined
if the property has not yet been initialized.
Defaults to: false
The config property value.
Gets the number of records in store.
If using paging, this may not be the total size of the dataset. If the data object used by the Reader contains the dataset size, then the Ext.data.ProxyStore#getTotalCount function returns the dataset size. Note: see the Important note in Ext.data.ProxyStore#method-load.
When store is filtered, it's the number of records matching the filter.
The number of Records in the Store.
Returns a collection of readonly sub-collections of your store's records with grouping applied. These sub-collections are maintained internally by the collection.
See groupField, groupDir. Example for a store containing records with a color field:
var myStore = Ext.create('Ext.data.Store', {
groupField: 'color',
groupDir : 'DESC'
});
myStore.getGroups();
The above should result in the following format:
[
{
name: 'yellow',
children: [
// all records where the color field is 'yellow'
]
},
{
name: 'red',
children: [
// all records where the color field is 'red'
]
}
]
Group contents are affected by filtering.
The grouped data
Retrieves the id
. This method Will auto-generate an id if one has not already
been configured.
id
Returns the initial configuration passed to the constructor when instantiating this class.
Given this example Ext.button.Button definition and instance:
Ext.define('MyApp.view.Button', {
extend: 'Ext.button.Button',
xtype: 'mybutton',
scale: 'large',
enableToggle: true
});
var btn = Ext.create({
xtype: 'mybutton',
renderTo: Ext.getBody(),
text: 'Test Button'
});
Calling btn.getInitialConfig()
would return an object including the config
options passed to the create
method:
xtype: 'mybutton',
renderTo: // The document body itself
text: 'Test Button'
Calling btn.getInitialConfig('text')
returns 'Test Button'.
name : String (optional)
Name of the config option to return.
The full config object or a single config value
when name
parameter specified.
Gets all Ext.data.Model added or updated since the last commit. Note that the order of records returned is not deterministic and does not indicate the order in which records were modified. Note also that removed records are not included (use getRemovedRecords for that).
The added and updated Model instances
Returns all phantom
records in this store.
A possibly empty array of phantom
records.
Gathers a range of Records between specified indices.
This method is affected by filtering.
start : Number
The starting index. Defaults to zero.
end : Number
The ending index. Defaults to the last record. The end index is included.
An array of records.
Returns the array of records which have been removed since the last time this store was synced.
This is used internally, when purging removed records after a successful sync. This is overridden by TreeStore because TreeStore accumulates deleted records on removal of child nodes from their parent, not on removal of records from its collection. The collection has records added on expand, and removed on collapse.
Returns any records that have been removed from the store but not yet destroyed on the proxy.
The removed Model instances. Note that this is a copy of the store's array, so may be mutated.
Returns the total number of Ext.data.Model instances that the Ext.data.proxy.Proxy indicates exist. This will usually differ from getCount when using paging - getCount returns the number of records loaded into the Store at the moment, getTotalCount returns the number of records that could be loaded into the Store if the Store contained all data
The total number of Model instances available via the Proxy. 0 returned if no value has been set via the reader.
Returns all valid, non-phantom Model instances that have been updated in the Store but not yet synchronized with the Proxy.
The updated Model instances
Groups data inside the store.
grouper : String/Object
Either a string name of one of the fields in this Store's configured Ext.data.Model, or an object, or a Ext.util.Grouper configuration object.
direction : String (optional)
The overall direction to group the data by. Defaults to the value of groupDir.
Checks to see if this object has any listeners for a specified event, or whether the event bubbles. The answer indicates whether the event needs firing or not.
eventName : String
The name of the event to check for
true
if the event is being listened for or bubbles, else false
Returns true if the store has a pending load task.
true
if the store has a pending load task.
Get the index of the record within the virtual store. Because virtual stores only load a partial set of records, not all records in the logically matching set will have been loaded and will therefore return -1.
record : Ext.data.Model
The record to find.
The index of the record
or -1 if not found.
Get the index within the store of the record with the passed id. Because virtual stores only load a partial set of records, not all records in the logically matching set will have been loaded and will therefore return -1.
id : String
The id of the record to find.
The index of the record or -1 if not found.
Initialize configuration for this class. a typical example:
Ext.define('My.awesome.Class', {
// The default config
config: {
name: 'Awesome',
isAwesome: true
},
constructor: function(config) {
this.initConfig(config);
}
});
var awesome = new My.awesome.Class({
name: 'Super Awesome'
});
alert(awesome.getName()); // 'Super Awesome'
instanceConfig : Object
this
Tests whether the store currently has any active filters.
true
if the store is filtered.
Tests whether the store currently has an active grouper.
true
if the store is grouped.
Returns true
if the store has been loaded.
true
if the store has been loaded.
Returns true if the Store is currently performing a load operation
true
if the Store is currently loading
Tests whether the store currently has any active sorters.
true
if the store is sorted.
Checks if all events, or a specific event, is suspended.
event : String (optional)
The name of the specific event to check
true
if events are suspended
Adds a "destroyable" object to an internal list of objects that will be destroyed
when this instance is destroyed (via destroy
).
name : String
value : Object
The value
passed.
Marks this store as needing a load. When the current executing event handler exits, this store will send a request to load using its configured proxy.
Upon return of the data from whatever data source the proxy connected to, the retrieved Ext.data.Model will be loaded into this store, and the optional callback will be called. Example usage:
store.load({
scope: this,
callback: function(records, operation, success) {
// the operation object
// contains all of the details of the load operation
console.log(records);
}
});
If the callback scope does not need to be set, a function can simply be passed:
store.load(function(records, operation, success) {
console.log('loaded records');
});
Available since: 1.1.0
options : Object (optional)
This is passed into the Ext.data.operation.Operation object that is created and then sent to the proxy's Ext.data.proxy.Proxy#read function. In addition to the options listed below, this object may contain properties to configure the Ext.data.operation.Operation.
callback : Function (optional)
A function which is called when the response arrives.
records : Ext.data.Model[]
Array of records.
operation : Ext.data.operation.Operation
The Operation itself.
success : Boolean
true
when operation completed successfully.
addRecords : Boolean (optional)
Specify as true
to add the incoming records
rather than the default which is to have the incoming records replace the existing store
contents.
Defaults to:
false
this
Shorthand for addManagedListener. The addManagedListener method is used when some object (call it "A") is listening to an event on another observable object ("B") and you want to remove that listener from "B" when "A" is destroyed. This is not an issue when "B" is destroyed because all of its listeners will be removed at that time.
Example:
Ext.define('Foo', {
extend: 'Ext.Component',
initComponent: function () {
this.addManagedListener(MyApp.SomeSharedMenu, 'show', this.doSomething);
this.callParent();
}
});
As you can see, when an instance of Foo is destroyed, it ensures that the 'show'
listener on the menu (MyApp.SomeGlobalSharedMenu
) is also removed.
As of version 5.1 it is no longer necessary to use this method in most cases because
listeners are automatically managed if the scope object provided to
addListener is an Observable instance.
However, if the observable instance and scope are not the same object you
still need to use mon
or addManagedListener
if you want the listener to be
managed.
item : Ext.util.Observable/Ext.dom.Element
The item to which to add a listener/listeners.
ename : Object/String
The event name, or an object containing event name properties.
fn : Function/String (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event
name, this is the handler function or the name of a method on the specified
scope
.
scope : Object (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event name, this is
the scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is executed.
options : Object (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event name, this is
the addListener options.
Only when the destroyable
option is specified.
A Destroyable
object. An object which implements the destroy
method which removes
all listeners added in this call. For example:
this.btnListeners = myButton.mon({
destroyable: true
mouseover: function() { console.log('mouseover'); },
mouseout: function() { console.log('mouseout'); },
click: function() { console.log('click'); }
});
And when those listeners need to be removed:
Ext.destroy(this.btnListeners);
or
this.btnListeners.destroy();
Shorthand for removeManagedListener. Removes listeners that were added by the mon method.
item : Ext.util.Observable/Ext.dom.Element
The item from which to remove a listener/listeners.
ename : Object/String
The event name, or an object containing event name properties.
fn : Function (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event name, this is
the handler function.
scope : Object (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event name, this is
the scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is executed.
The on method is shorthand for addListener.
Appends an event handler to this object. For example:
myGridPanel.on("itemclick", this.onItemClick, this);
The method also allows for a single argument to be passed which is a config object containing properties which specify multiple events. For example:
myGridPanel.on({
cellclick: this.onCellClick,
select: this.onSelect,
viewready: this.onViewReady,
scope: this // Important. Ensure "this" is correct during handler execution
});
One can also specify options for each event handler separately:
myGridPanel.on({
cellclick: {fn: this.onCellClick, scope: this, single: true},
viewready: {fn: panel.onViewReady, scope: panel}
});
Names of methods in a specified scope may also be used:
myGridPanel.on({
cellclick: {fn: 'onCellClick', scope: this, single: true},
viewready: {fn: 'onViewReady', scope: panel}
});
eventName : String/Object
The name of the event to listen for. May also be an object who's property names are event names.
fn : Function/String (optional)
The method the event invokes or the name of
the method within the specified scope
. Will be called with arguments
given to Ext.util.Observable#fireEvent plus the options
parameter described
below.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is
executed. If omitted, defaults to the object which fired the event.
options : Object (optional)
An object containing handler configuration.
Note: The options object will also be passed as the last argument to every event handler.
This object may contain any of the following properties:
scope : Object
The scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is executed. If omitted,
defaults to the object which fired the event.
delay : Number
The number of milliseconds to delay the invocation of the handler after the event fires.
single : Boolean
True to add a handler to handle just the next firing of the event, and then remove itself.
buffer : Number
Causes the handler to be scheduled to run in an Ext.util.DelayedTask delayed by the specified number of milliseconds. If the event fires again within that time, the original handler is not invoked, but the new handler is scheduled in its place.
onFrame : Number
Causes the handler to be scheduled to run at the next animation frame event. If the event fires again before that time, the handler is not rescheduled - the handler will only be called once when the next animation frame is fired, with the last set of arguments passed.
target : Ext.util.Observable
Only call the handler if the event was fired on the target Observable, not if the event was bubbled up from a child Observable.
element : String
This option is only valid for listeners bound to Ext.Component. The name of a Component property which references an Ext.dom.Element to add a listener to.
This option is useful during Component construction to add DOM event listeners to elements of Ext.Component which will exist only after the Component is rendered.
For example, to add a click listener to a Panel's body:
var panel = new Ext.panel.Panel({
title: 'The title',
listeners: {
click: this.handlePanelClick,
element: 'body'
}
});
In order to remove listeners attached using the element, you'll need to reference the element itself as seen below.
panel.body.un(...)
delegate : String (optional)
A simple selector to filter the event target or look for a descendant of the target.
The "delegate" option is only available on Ext.dom.Element instances (or when attaching a listener to a Ext.dom.Element via a Component using the element option).
See the delegate example below.
capture : Boolean (optional)
When set to true
, the listener is fired in the capture phase of the event propagation
sequence, instead of the default bubble phase.
The capture
option is only available on Ext.dom.Element instances (or
when attaching a listener to a Ext.dom.Element via a Component using the
element option).
stopPropagation : Boolean (optional)
This option is only valid for listeners bound to Ext.dom.Element.
true
to call stopPropagation on the event
object before firing the handler.
preventDefault : Boolean (optional)
This option is only valid for listeners bound to Ext.dom.Element.
true
to call preventDefault on the event
object before firing the handler.
stopEvent : Boolean (optional)
This option is only valid for listeners bound to Ext.dom.Element.
true
to call stopEvent on the event object
before firing the handler.
args : Array (optional)
Optional set of arguments to pass to the handler function before the actual
fired event arguments. For example, if args
is set to ['foo', 42]
,
the event handler function will be called with an arguments list like this:
handler('foo', 42, <actual event arguments>...);
destroyable : Boolean (optional)
When specified as true
, the function returns a destroyable
object. An object
which implements the destroy
method which removes all listeners added in this call.
This syntax can be a helpful shortcut to using un; particularly when
removing multiple listeners. NOTE - not compatible when using the element
option. See un for the proper syntax for removing listeners added using the
element config.
Defaults to:
false
priority : Number (optional)
An optional numeric priority that determines the order in which event handlers are run. Event handlers with no priority will be run as if they had a priority of 0. Handlers with a higher priority will be prioritized to run sooner than those with a lower priority. Negative numbers can be used to set a priority lower than the default. Internally, the framework uses a range of 1000 or greater, and -1000 or lesser for handlers that are intended to run before or after all others, so it is recommended to stay within the range of -999 to 999 when setting the priority of event handlers in application-level code. A priority must be an integer to be valid. Fractional values are reserved for internal framework use.
order : String (optional)
A legacy option that is provided for backward compatibility.
It is recommended to use the priority
option instead. Available options are:
'before'
: equal to a priority of 100
'current'
: equal to a priority of 0
or default priority'after'
: equal to a priority of -100
Defaults to:
'current'
order : String (optional)
A shortcut for the order
event option. Provided for backward compatibility.
Please use the priority
event option instead.
Defaults to: 'current'
Only when the destroyable
option is specified.
A Destroyable
object. An object which implements the destroy
method which removes
all listeners added in this call. For example:
this.btnListeners = = myButton.on({
destroyable: true
mouseover: function() { console.log('mouseover'); },
mouseout: function() { console.log('mouseout'); },
click: function() { console.log('click'); }
});
And when those listeners need to be removed:
Ext.destroy(this.btnListeners);
or
this.btnListeners.destroy();
Appends an after-event handler.
Same as addListener with order
set
to 'after'
.
eventName : String/String[]/Object
The name of the event to listen for.
fn : Function/String
The method the event invokes.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope for fn
.
options : Object (optional)
An object containing handler configuration.
Attached as the 'complete' event listener to a proxy's Batch object. Iterates over the batch operations and updates the Store's internal data MixedCollection.
batch : Object
operation : Object
Attached as the 'operationcomplete' event listener to a proxy's Batch object. By default just calls through to onProxyWrite.
batch : Object
operation : Object
Appends a before-event handler. Returning false
from the handler will stop the event.
Same as addListener with order
set
to 'before'
.
eventName : String/String[]/Object
The name of the event to listen for.
fn : Function/String
The method the event invokes.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope for fn
.
options : Object (optional)
An object containing handler configuration.
Removes any records when a write is returned from the server.
records : Ext.data.Model[]
The array of removed records
operation : Ext.data.operation.Operation
The operation that just completed
success : Boolean
True if the operation was successful
Callback for any write Operation over the Proxy. Updates the Store's MixedCollection to reflect the updates provided by the Proxy
operation : Object
Determines if the passed range is available in the page cache.
start : Number
The start index
end : Number
The end index in the range
Relays selected events from the specified Observable as if the events were fired
by this
.
For example if you are extending Grid, you might decide to forward some events from store. So you can do this inside your initComponent:
this.relayEvents(this.getStore(), ['load']);
The grid instance will then have an observable 'load' event which will be passed the parameters of the store's load event and any function fired with the grid's load event would have access to the grid using the this keyword (unless the event is handled by a controller's control/listen event listener in which case 'this' will be the controller rather than the grid).
origin : Object
The Observable whose events this object is to relay.
events : String[]/Object
Array of event names to relay or an Object with key/value pairs translating to ActualEventName/NewEventName respectively. For example: this.relayEvents(this, {add:'push', remove:'pop'});
Would now redispatch the add event of this as a push event and the remove event as a pop event.
prefix : String (optional)
A common prefix to prepend to the event names. For example:
this.relayEvents(this.getStore(), ['load', 'clear'], 'store');
Now the grid will forward 'load' and 'clear' events of store as 'storeload' and 'storeclear'.
A Destroyable
object. An object which implements the destroy
method
which, when destroyed, removes all relayers. For example:
this.storeRelayers = this.relayEvents(this.getStore(), ['load', 'clear'], 'store');
Can be undone by calling
Ext.destroy(this.storeRelayers);
or this.store.relayers.destroy();
This function is called only once per reload and after this page is loaded it will call the handleReload callback
options : Object
Removes all records from the store. This method does a "fast remove", individual remove events are not called. The clear event is fired upon completion.
Available since: 1.1.0
Removes an individual Filter from the current filter set using the passed Filter/Filter id and by default, applies the updated filter set to the Store's unfiltered dataset.
toRemove : String/Ext.util.Filter
The id of a Filter to remove from the filter set, or a Filter instance to remove.
suppressEvent : Boolean (optional)
If true
the filter is cleared silently.
Removes an event handler.
eventName : String
The type of event the handler was associated with.
fn : Function
The handler to remove. This must be a reference to the function passed into the addListener call.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope originally specified for the handler. It must be the same as the scope argument specified in the original call to Ext.util.Observable#addListener or the listener will not be removed.
Removes listeners that were added by the mon method.
item : Ext.util.Observable/Ext.dom.Element
The item from which to remove a listener/listeners.
ename : Object/String
The event name, or an object containing event name properties.
fn : Function (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event name, this is
the handler function.
scope : Object (optional)
If the ename
parameter was an event name, this is
the scope (this
reference) in which the handler function is executed.
Remove a single managed listener item
isClear : Boolean
True if this is being called during a clear
managedListener : Object
The managed listener item
item : Object
ename : String
fn : Function
scope : Object
See removeManagedListener for other args
Gets the default scope for firing late bound events (string names with no scope attached) at runtime.
defaultScope : Object (optional)
The default scope to return if none is found.
Defaults to: this
The default event scope
Resumes automatically syncing the Store with its Proxy. Only applicable if
autoSync is true
syncNow : Boolean
Pass true
to synchronize now. Only synchronizes with the Proxy
if the suspension count has gone to zero (We are not under a higher level of suspension)
Resumes firing of the named event(s).
After calling this method to resume events, the events will fire when requested to fire.
Note that if the suspendEvent method is called multiple times for a certain event, this converse method will have to be called the same number of times for it to resume firing.
eventName : String...
Multiple event names to resume.
Resumes firing events (see suspendEvents).
If events were suspended using the queueSuspended
parameter, then all events fired
during event suspension will be sent to any listeners now.
discardQueue : Boolean (optional)
true
to prevent any previously queued events from firing
while we were suspended. See suspendEvents.
Saves all pending changes via the configured proxy. Use sync instead.
Deprecated since version 4.0.0
Will be removed in the next major version
Sets a single/multiple configuration options.
name : String/Object
The name of the property to set, or a set of key value pairs to set.
value : Object (optional)
The value to set for the name parameter.
this
Sorts the data in the Store by one or more of its properties. Example usage:
//sort by a single field
myStore.sort('myField', 'DESC');
//sorting by multiple fields
myStore.sort([
{
property : 'age',
direction: 'ASC'
},
{
property : 'name',
direction: 'DESC'
}
]);
Internally, Store converts the passed arguments into an array of Ext.util.Sorter instances, and either delegates the actual sorting to its internal Ext.util.Collection or the remote server.
When passing a single string argument to sort, Store maintains a ASC/DESC toggler per field, so this code:
store.sort('myField');
store.sort('myField');
Is equivalent to this code, because Store handles the toggling automatically:
store.sort('myField', 'ASC');
store.sort('myField', 'DESC');
field : String/Ext.util.Sorter[] (optional)
Either a string name of one of the fields in this Store's configured Ext.data.Model, or an array of sorter configurations.
direction : "ASC"/"DESC" (optional)
The overall direction to sort the data by.
Defaults to: "ASC"
mode : "append"/"prepend"/"replace"/"multi" (optional)
Defaults to: "replace"
Get the reference to the class from which this object was instantiated. Note that unlike
Ext.Base#self, this.statics()
is scope-independent and it always returns
the class from which it was called, regardless of what this
points to during run-time
Ext.define('My.Cat', {
statics: {
totalCreated: 0,
speciesName: 'Cat' // My.Cat.speciesName = 'Cat'
},
constructor: function() {
var statics = this.statics();
// always equals to 'Cat' no matter what 'this' refers to
// equivalent to: My.Cat.speciesName
alert(statics.speciesName);
alert(this.self.speciesName); // dependent on 'this'
statics.totalCreated++;
},
clone: function() {
var cloned = new this.self(); // dependent on 'this'
// equivalent to: My.Cat.speciesName
cloned.groupName = this.statics().speciesName;
return cloned;
}
});
Ext.define('My.SnowLeopard', {
extend: 'My.Cat',
statics: {
speciesName: 'Snow Leopard' // My.SnowLeopard.speciesName = 'Snow Leopard'
},
constructor: function() {
this.callParent();
}
});
var cat = new My.Cat(); // alerts 'Cat', then alerts 'Cat'
var snowLeopard = new My.SnowLeopard(); // alerts 'Cat', then alerts 'Snow Leopard'
var clone = snowLeopard.clone();
alert(Ext.getClassName(clone)); // alerts 'My.SnowLeopard'
alert(clone.groupName); // alerts 'Cat'
alert(My.Cat.totalCreated); // alerts 3
Suspends automatically syncing the Store with its Proxy. Only applicable if
autoSync is true
Suspends firing of the named event(s).
After calling this method to suspend events, the events will no longer fire when requested to fire.
Note that if this is called multiple times for a certain event, the converse method resumeEvent will have to be called the same number of times for it to resume firing.
eventName : String...
Multiple event names to suspend.
Suspends the firing of all events. (see resumeEvents)
queueSuspended : Boolean
true
to queue up suspended events to be fired
after the resumeEvents call instead of discarding all suspended events.
Synchronizes the store with its proxy. This asks the proxy to batch together any new, updated and deleted records in the store, updating the store's internal representation of the records as each operation completes.
options : Object (optional)
Object containing one or more properties supported by the sync method (these get passed along to the underlying proxy's batch method):
batch : Ext.data.Batch / Object (optional)
A Ext.data.Batch object (or batch config to apply to the created batch). If unspecified a default batch will be auto-created as needed.
callback : Function (optional)
The function to be called upon completion of the sync. The callback is called regardless of success or failure and is passed the following parameters:
batch : Ext.data.Batch
The Ext.data.Batch that was processed, containing all operations in their current state after processing
options : Object
The options argument that was originally passed into sync
success : Function (optional)
The function to be called upon successful completion of the sync. The success function is called only if no exceptions were reported in any operations. If one or more exceptions occurred then the failure function will be called instead. The success function is called with the following parameters:
batch : Ext.data.Batch
The Ext.data.Batch that was processed, containing all operations in their current state after processing
options : Object
The options argument that was originally passed into sync
failure : Function (optional)
The function to be called upon unsuccessful completion of the sync. The failure function is called when one or more operations returns an exception during processing (even if some operations were also successful). In this case you can check the batch's exceptions array to see exactly which operations had exceptions. The failure function is called with the following parameters:
batch : Ext.data.Batch
The Ext.data.Batch that was processed, containing all operations in their current state after processing
options : Object
The options argument that was originally passed into sync
params : Object (optional)
Additional params to send during the sync Operation(s).
scope : Object (optional)
The scope in which to execute any callbacks (i.e. the this
object inside the callback, success and/or failure functions). Defaults to the store's proxy.
this
Called from onCollectionItemsAdd. Collection add changes the items reference of the collection, and that array object if directly referenced by Ranges. The ranges have to refresh themselves upon add.
Shorthand for removeListener. Removes an event handler.
eventName : String
The type of event the handler was associated with.
fn : Function
The handler to remove. This must be a reference to the function passed into the addListener call.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope originally specified for the handler. It must be the same as the scope argument specified in the original call to Ext.util.Observable#addListener or the listener will not be removed.
Removes a before-event handler.
Same as removeListener with order
set to 'after'
.
eventName : String/String[]/Object
The name of the event the handler was associated with.
fn : Function/String
The handler to remove.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope originally specified for fn
.
options : Object (optional)
Extra options object.
Removes a before-event handler.
Same as removeListener with order
set to 'before'
.
eventName : String/String[]/Object
The name of the event the handler was associated with.
fn : Function/String
The handler to remove.
scope : Object (optional)
The scope originally specified for fn
.
options : Object (optional)
Extra options object.
Destroys a given set of linked
objects. This is only needed if
the linked object is being destroyed before this instance.
names : String[]
The names of the linked objects to destroy.
this
Watches config properties.
instance.watchConfig({
title: 'onTitleChange',
scope: me
});
Available since: 6.7.0
name : Object
fn : Object
scope : Object
Adds new config properties to this class. This is called for classes when they are declared, then for any mixins that class may define and finally for any overrides defined that target the class.
config : Object
mixinClass : Ext.Class (optional)
The mixin class if the configs are from a mixin.
name : Object
member : Object
privacy : Object
Add methods / properties to the prototype of this class.
Ext.define('My.awesome.Cat', {
constructor: function() {
...
}
});
My.awesome.Cat.addMembers({
meow: function() {
alert('Meowww...');
}
});
var kitty = new My.awesome.Cat();
kitty.meow();
members : Object
The members to add to this class.
isStatic : Boolean (optional)
Pass true
if the members are static.
Defaults to: false
privacy : Boolean (optional)
Pass true
if the members are private. This
only has meaning in debug mode and only for methods.
Defaults to: false
Add / override static properties of this class.
Ext.define('My.cool.Class', {
...
});
My.cool.Class.addStatics({
someProperty: 'someValue', // My.cool.Class.someProperty = 'someValue'
method1: function() { ... }, // My.cool.Class.method1 = function() { ... };
method2: function() { ... } // My.cool.Class.method2 = function() { ... };
});
members : Object
this
Borrow another class' members to the prototype of this class.
Ext.define('Bank', {
money: '$$$',
printMoney: function() {
alert('$$$$$$$');
}
});
Ext.define('Thief', {
...
});
Thief.borrow(Bank, ['money', 'printMoney']);
var steve = new Thief();
alert(steve.money); // alerts '$$$'
steve.printMoney(); // alerts '$$$$$$$'
fromClass : Ext.Base
The class to borrow members from
members : Array/String
The names of the members to borrow
this
Create a new instance of this Class.
Ext.define('My.cool.Class', {
...
});
My.cool.Class.create({
someConfig: true
});
All parameters are passed to the constructor of the class.
the created instance.
Create aliases for existing prototype methods. Example:
Ext.define('My.cool.Class', {
method1: function() { ... },
method2: function() { ... }
});
var test = new My.cool.Class();
My.cool.Class.createAlias({
method3: 'method1',
method4: 'method2'
});
test.method3(); // test.method1()
My.cool.Class.createAlias('method5', 'method3');
test.method5(); // test.method3() -> test.method1()
alias : String/Object
The new method name, or an object to set multiple aliases. See flexSetter
origin : String/Object
The original method name
Returns the Ext.Configurator
for this class.
Get the current class' name in string format.
Ext.define('My.cool.Class', {
constructor: function() {
alert(this.self.getName()); // alerts 'My.cool.Class'
}
});
My.cool.Class.getName(); // 'My.cool.Class'
className
Used internally by the mixins pre-processor
name : Object
mixinClass : Object
Override members of this class. Overridden methods can be invoked via callParent.
Ext.define('My.Cat', {
constructor: function() {
alert("I'm a cat!");
}
});
My.Cat.override({
constructor: function() {
alert("I'm going to be a cat!");
this.callParent(arguments);
alert("Meeeeoooowwww");
}
});
var kitty = new My.Cat(); // alerts "I'm going to be a cat!"
// alerts "I'm a cat!"
// alerts "Meeeeoooowwww"
Direct use of this method should be rare. Use Ext.define instead:
Ext.define('My.CatOverride', {
override: 'My.Cat',
constructor: function() {
alert("I'm going to be a cat!");
this.callParent(arguments);
alert("Meeeeoooowwww");
}
});
The above accomplishes the same result but can be managed by the Ext.Loader which can properly order the override and its target class and the build process can determine whether the override is needed based on the required state of the target class (My.Cat).
members : Object
The properties to add to this class. This should be specified as an object literal containing one or more properties.
this class
Fired when a Model instance has been added to this Store.
Available since: 1.1.0
store : Ext.data.Store
The store.
records : Ext.data.Model[]
The records that were added.
index : Number
The index at which the records were inserted.
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires before a request is made for a new data object. If the beforeload handler returns
false
the load action will be canceled.
Note: If you are using a buffered store, you should use beforeprefetch.
Available since: 1.1.0
store : Ext.data.Store
This Store
operation : Ext.data.operation.Operation
The Ext.data.operation.Operation object that will be passed to the Proxy to load the Store
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires before a store is sorted.
For remotely sorted stores, this will be just before the load operation triggered by changing the store's sorters.
For locally sorted stores, this will be just before the data items in the store's backing collection are sorted.
store : Ext.data.Store
The store being sorted
sorters : Ext.util.Sorter[]
Array of sorters applied to the store
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fired before a call to sync is executed. Return false from any listener to cancel the sync
options : Object
Hash of all records to be synchronized, broken down into create, update and destroy
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires when the beginUpdate method is called. Automatic synchronization as configured by the autoSync flag is deferred until the endUpdate method is called, so multiple mutations can be coalesced into one synchronization operation.
Fired after the removeAll method is called.
Available since: 1.1.0
this : Ext.data.Store
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires for any data change in the store. This is a catch-all event that is typically fired
in conjunction with other events (such as add
, remove
, update
, refresh
).
Available since: 1.1.0
this : Ext.data.Store
The data store
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires when the endUpdate method is called. Automatic synchronization as configured by the autoSync flag is deferred until the endUpdate method is called, so multiple mutations can be coalesced into one synchronization operation.
Fires whenever the store reads data from a remote data source.
Note: If you are using a buffered store, you should use prefetch.
Available since: 1.1.0
this : Ext.data.Store
records : Ext.data.Model[]
An array of records
successful : Boolean
True if the operation was successful.
operation : Ext.data.operation.Read
The Ext.data.operation.Read object that was used in the data load call
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires when this store's underlying reader (available via the proxy) provides new metadata. Metadata usually consists of new field definitions, but can include any configuration data required by an application, and can be processed as needed in the event handler. This event is currently only fired for JsonReaders.
Available since: 1.1.0
this : Ext.data.Store
meta : Object
The JSON metadata
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires when the data cache has changed in a bulk manner (e.g., it has been sorted, filtered, etc.) and a widget that is using this Store as a Record cache should refresh its view.
this : Ext.data.Store
The data store
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fired when one or more records have been removed from this Store.
The signature for this event has changed in 5.0:
Available since: 5.0.0
store : Ext.data.Store
The Store object
records : Ext.data.Model[]
The records that were removed. In previous releases this was a single record, not an array.
index : Number
The index at which the records were removed.
isMove : Boolean
true
if the child node is being removed so it can be
moved to another position in this Store.
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires after a store is sorted.
For remotely sorted stores, this will be upon the success of a load operation triggered by changing the store's sorters.
For locally sorted stores, this will be just after the data items in the store's backing collection are sorted.
store : Ext.data.Store
The store being sorted
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires when a Model instance has been updated.
Available since: 1.1.0
this : Ext.data.Store
record : Ext.data.Model
The Model instance that was updated
operation : String
The update operation being performed. Value may be one of:
Ext.data.Model.EDIT
Ext.data.Model.REJECT
Ext.data.Model.COMMIT
modifiedFieldNames : String[]
Array of field names changed during edit.
details : Object
An object describing the change. See the itemchange event of the store's backing collection
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.
Fires whenever a successful write has been made via the configured Proxy
Available since: 3.4.0
store : Ext.data.Store
This Store
operation : Ext.data.operation.Operation
The Ext.data.operation.Operation object that was used in the write
eOpts : Object
The options object passed to Ext.util.Observable.addListener.