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Terms, Icons, and Labels

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.

Access Levels

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.

Member Types

Member Syntax

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).

lookupComponent ( item ) : Ext.Component
protected

Called when a raw config object is added to this container either during initialization of the items config, or when new items are added), or {@link #insert inserted.

This method converts the passed object into an instanced child component.

This may be overridden in subclasses when special processing needs to be applied to child creation.

Parameters

item :  Object

The config object being added.

Returns
Ext.Component

The component to be added.

Let's look at each part of the member row:

Member Flags

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.

Class Icons

- 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

Member Icons

- 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

Class Member Quick-Nav Menu

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.

Getter and Setter Methods

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.

History Bar

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.

Search and Filters

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.

API Doc Class Metadata

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:

Expanding and Collapsing Examples and Class Members

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.

Desktop -vs- Mobile View

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:

Viewing the Class Source

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.

Ext JS 7.3.1 - Modern Toolkit


top
Guide applies to: modern

Ext JS npm Packages

This guide covers the Ext JS npm packages available.

Repository Dashboard

Repository Login

If you are a TRIAL customer

The Ext JS 30-day trial packages are available to install from public npm. Install the latest Ext JS version using the following command and skip to Step 2.

$ npm install -g @sencha/ext-gen

If you are an ACTIVE customer

Ext JS and all related commercial packages are hosted on Sencha's private npm registry. Login to the registry using the following command which configures npm to download packages in the @sencha scope from Sencha's registry.

Username Note:

The email and password used during support portal activation (after license purchase) will be used to login to Sencha’s NPM repo. The username is the same as the email used, however, the @ character is replaced with '..' two periods. For example [email protected] converts to username: name..gmail.com

$ npm login --registry=https://npm.sencha.com/ --scope=@sencha

$ npm install -g @sencha/ext-gen

Repository Packages

These packages come with Ext JS 7.x. All of them use the same @sencha scope.

npm Packages Add-on Components Config Name Product Tier Description
ext Standard Base framework with dependencies on modern and core
ext-classic Standard All Classic components
ext-classic-locale Standard Locale package for Classic toolkit
ext-classic-touch-sizing Standard
ext-core Core core Standard All core - layout, DOM classes
ext-modern Standard All Modern components
ext-angular-gen Standard ExtAngular Application Generator
ext-angular-boilerplate Standard Modern Boilerplate example
ext-angular-kitchensink Standard Kitchensink Examples
ext-angular Standard The main ExtAngular Package
ext-angular-webpack-plugin Standard WebPack Plugin
ext-charts Charts charts Standard The Chart package that provide data visualization functionality
ext-amf AMF amf Standard Action Message Format (AMF) package
ext-google Google google Standard Google maps and calendars
ext-soap Soap soap Standard Simple Object Access Protocol
ext-ux UX ux Standard UX package provides components like Gauge, Ratings
ext-modern-locale Standard Locale package for Modern toolkit
 
Font Packages
ext-font-awesome Font Awesome font-awesome Standard font-awesome icons
ext-font-ext Font-ext font-ext Standard Ext JS Font Package
ext-font-ios Font-ios font-ios Standard Fonts for iOS theme
ext-font-pictos Font-pictos font-pictos Standard Pictos Font Package
 
Theme Packages
ext-modern-theme-base Standard Base for all the themes under modern
ext-modern-theme-material Standard Material theme for the Modern toolkit
ext-modern-theme-ios Standard Modern iOS Theme
ext-modern-theme-neptune Standard Modern borderless theme
ext-modern-theme-triton Standard Modern flat, borderless theme
ext-classic-theme-aria Standard
ext-classic-theme-base Standard This package is the base for all the themes under classic.
ext-classic-theme-classic Standard The classic blue Ext JS theme.
ext-classic-theme-crisp Standard Minimalistic Theme.
ext-classic-theme-crisp-touch Standard Crisp-Based Touch Theme.
ext-classic-theme-graphite Standard Accessible theme based on Triton
ext-classic-theme-gray Standard Gray theme. Extends "theme-classic"
ext-classic-theme-material Standard Material theme for the Classic toolkit
ext-classic-theme-neptune Standard Modern borderless theme.
ext-classic-theme-neptune-touch Standard Neptune-Based Touch Theme.
ext-classic-theme-neutral Standard The neutral theme is a highly configurable, abstract base theme for the Ext JS classic toolkit
ext-classic-theme-triton Standard Flat, borderless theme
 
Enterprise Packages
ext-modern-treegrid Modern Tree Grid treegrid Enterprise This package lets you use Trees and Grids
ext-exporter Exporter exporter Enterprise Export to various file formats
ext-pivot Pivot Grid pivot Enterprise Rapid summarization of large sets of data
ext-pivot-d3 Pivot D3 pivot-d3 Enterprise Pivot with D3
ext-pivot-locale Pivot Locale pivot-locale Enterprise Locale feature on a Pivot grid
ext-d3 D3 Adapter d3 Enterprise Data visualization
ext-calendar Calendar calendar Enterprise Custom calendars
ext-froala-editor Froala Editor froala-editor Enterprise Froala editor

Requirements

Add the Add-on Component to your Project

Step 1: Install the Add-on npm Dependency

This will add it to the add-on dependency in the package.json.

Example:

npm install --save @sencha/ext-<addon-package>

Specific Example:

npm install --save @sencha/ext-calendar

Step 2: Declare the Package in app.json

In the project's app.json requires property, declare the new package dependency calendar or whatever the package config name is.

Example app.json:

"requires": [
    "font-awesome",

    // Declare the add-on Component package here
    "calendar"
],

Step 3: Add the Add-on Component to a View

In this step, add the enterprise component to one of the applications views. In this example, the calendar package is added to the Main.js view.

Example:

{
    title: 'Home',
    iconCls: 'x-fa fa-home',
    layout: 'fit',
    items: [{
        xtype: 'calendar'
    }]
}

Step 4: Try it out

Start up your your web server and reload the web page. Verify the new component renders.

What's Next

Now you're ready to move to the next stage of using all the Ext JS Components.

Reference

For Workspaces: Declare Packages in the Workspace

In some projects with a workspace configuration, configure the packages.

In workspace.json append the dir variable under packages with new add-on package location.

${framework.dir}/../ext-<addon-package>

Example before:

"packages": {
"dir": "${workspace.dir}/packages”,

Example after:

"packages": {
"dir": "${workspace.dir}/packages,${framework.dir}/../ext-calendar",

Ext JS 7.3.1 - Modern Toolkit