1 / 39

Advanced Forms Builder Topics

Advanced Forms Builder Topics. Chapter 10. Objectives. Learn about form items that display boilerplate items, calculated data, and images Create forms that allow users to load and display image data Create form lists that display static data values

Télécharger la présentation

Advanced Forms Builder Topics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Advanced Forms Builder Topics Chapter 10 A Guide to Oracle9i

  2. Objectives • Learn about form items that display boilerplate items, calculated data, and images • Create forms that allow users to load and display image data • Create form lists that display static data values • Learn how to configure forms that retrieve and manipulate large data sets • Understand how to control data block relationships A Guide to Oracle9i

  3. Creating Non-Input Form Items • Most form items (text items, radio groups, check boxes, and so forth) allow users to input and change data values • Forms Builder also supports a number of items that display data but do not allow the user to change the displayed value A Guide to Oracle9i

  4. Creating Non-Input Form Items A Guide to Oracle9i

  5. Creating Non-Input Form Items • Display items: display text data that the user cannot modify; can also display calculated values based on form data values • Boilerplate objects (text and shapes) placed on top of other boilerplate objects, appear in the order in which you create them A Guide to Oracle9i

  6. Creating Non-Input Form Items • Following data block form displays data from the Clearwater Traders INVENTORY database table • Display items on this form include: • One that shows value for each inventory item, calculated as price times quantity on hand • Summary display item sums values of all retrieved items • Boilerplate rectangle and text label describe and emphasize the summary display item A Guide to Oracle9i

  7. Creating Non-Input Form Items A Guide to Oracle9i

  8. Creating a Form to Load and Display Graphic Images • Display graphic image on form as static imported image, which incorporates image data into form design (.fmb) file and compiles it into .fmx file, or as a dynamic image, which loads image data from workstation file system into form at runtime • Use static imported images to add graphic enhancements that stay the same regardless of data that currently appears on form A Guide to Oracle9i

  9. Creating a Form to Load and Display Graphic Images • Use dynamic images to display images retrieved from database or file system while form is running, or to retrieve and display large static images that do not appear every time you run form • To create a form that loads and displays dynamic images that the database stores, base form on table that contains data field with BLOB data type • To load images into database, create form trigger that uses READ_IMAGE_FILE built-in to load the image into form image item A Guide to Oracle9i

  10. Creating a Form to Load and Display Graphic Images A Guide to Oracle9i

  11. Creating the Data Block and Layout • Use the Data Block and Layout Wizards to create the data block and layout for the ITEM table fields • Recall that the ITEM table has a field named ITEM_IMAGE that is a BLOB (binary large object) data type, and that this field currently contains a locator for the BLOB image A Guide to Oracle9i

  12. Creating the Data Block and Layout A Guide to Oracle9i

  13. Creating Static Lists in Forms • A list item is a data block item that displays a static list from which users can select to provide form inputs • Use a form list item when the user can select from a limited number of choices that do not change very often • Use lists instead of radio buttons when there are more than five choices or when there is a limited amount of space on the form to display radio buttons A Guide to Oracle9i

  14. Three Types of Static List Items • Poplist: drop-down list that user opens when needed. When user opens list, drop-down box displays up to 10 items at once • T-List: also called Text List, always displays the current selection. It has up and down scroll arrows on right edge, and user can use these arrows to scroll through list items sequentially and select different values • Combo box: Poplist in which user can enter value if desired value does not appear in list A Guide to Oracle9i

  15. Creating Static Lists in Forms A Guide to Oracle9i

  16. Creating Static Lists In Forms A Guide to Oracle9i

  17. Creating Static Lists in Forms A Guide to Oracle9i

  18. Creating Static Lists in Forms A Guide to Oracle9i

  19. Using Forms with Large Data Sets • Form developers need to estimate the maximum number of records that form queries might retrieve, and then design their form applications to ensure that form performance remains satisfactory A Guide to Oracle9i

  20. Using Forms with Large Data Sets • Approaches for improving form data retrieval performance include • creating indexes on search fields • training users to count query hits • forcing users to enter search conditions in forms that might retrieve large data sets • configuring LOVs to allow users to filter data A Guide to Oracle9i

  21. Improving Form Data Retrieval A Guide to Oracle9i

  22. Improving Form Data Retrieval A Guide to Oracle9i

  23. Improving Form Data Retrieval A Guide to Oracle9i

  24. Improving Form Data Retrieval A Guide to Oracle9i

  25. Controlling Data Block Master-Detail Relationships • In a master-detail form, master block and detail block are coordinated • Master record and detail record are associated by a relationship • coordination-causing event: any operation that causes current record in master block to change, • When user performs a coordination-causing event, detail block values also change A Guide to Oracle9i

  26. Controlling Data Block Master-Detail Relationships A Guide to Oracle9i

  27. Controlling Data Block Master-Detail Relationships • When you use the Data Block Wizard to create a form that displays a master-detail relationship between two blocks, Forms Builder automatically • creates a relation object in the master block • creates several triggers and PL/SQL program units that enforce coordination between the form master and detail blocks A Guide to Oracle9i

  28. Controlling Data Block Master-Detail Relationships • The relation object specifies properties about the relationship: • name of the detail block • SQL join condition that specifies the relationship between the master block and the detail block and how the form handles deletions of master block records A Guide to Oracle9i

  29. Controlling Data Block Master-Detail Relationships A Guide to Oracle9i

  30. Relation Triggers and Program Units A Guide to Oracle9i

  31. Controlling Data Block Master-Detail Relationships • Relation’s Delete Record Behavior property specifies how deleting a record in master block affects records in detail block • Possible values: • Non Isolated: prevents user from deleting master record when associated detail records exist in database • Isolated: allows user to delete master record when associated detail records exist • Cascading: performs cascading delete; form deletes the master record, then deletes all associated detail records in detail block’s base table A Guide to Oracle9i

  32. Controlling Data Block Master-Detail Relationships • A relation’s Prevent Masterless Operations property specifies whether users can query or insert detail block records when there is no master record in the master block A Guide to Oracle9i

  33. Controlling Data Block Master-Detail Relationships • A relation’s Deferred and Automatic Query properties work together to determine whether the detail block records automatically change when the user selects a new master record, or if the user has to navigate explicitly to the detail block and refresh the detail records A Guide to Oracle9i

  34. Relation Triggers and Program Units These program units are called by the relation-handling triggers or by one another, and handle the details of the master-detail processing A Guide to Oracle9i

  35. Relation Triggers and Program Units A Guide to Oracle9i

  36. Changing Relation Properties Dynamically • User can specify retrieval properties of a relation while form is running • Use the SET_RELATION_PROPERTY built-in, which has the following syntax: SET_RELATION_PROPERTY('relation_name', property, value); A Guide to Oracle9i

  37. Changing Relation Properties Dynamically A Guide to Oracle9i

  38. Changing Relation Properties Dynamically A Guide to Oracle9i

  39. Summary • Creating Non-input form items • Display items • Creating forms to load and display graphic images • Creating the data block and layout • Creating static lists • Types of static lists • Using forms with large data sets • Improving form data retrieval • Controlling data block master-detail relationships • Relation triggers and program units • Changing relation properties dynamically A Guide to Oracle9i

More Related