Site Manager Developer Manual / Version 2101
Table Of ContentsProperty editors are used to edit properties in the document view of the Site Manager. There are a lot of property editors provided by CoreMedia (see Section 5.1.1, “Property Editors”) but sometimes it might be useful to extend the editors due to own needs.
Interface to implement
All property editors implement the interface
PropertyEditor
or one of its subinterfaces (see Javadoc). Nevertheless, you will normally subclass one of the existing property
editors instead of implementing
PropertyEditor
or its subinterfaces. If you want to support search and replace within the property, then the property editor
must implement the additional interface
SearchableTextComponent
and its method isSearchable()
must return true
. Search and replace affects the search
and replace dialogs and the Global-Search-and-Replace-Workflow. The file cap-examples.jar
contains a
simple example for a property editor with search and replace functionality: BasicStringEditor
.
Classes to subclass
The most common way to write own property editors is to subclass one of the existing editors. See Section 5.1.1, “Property Editors” for a list of supplied property editors.
Integrate your Property Editor into the Site Manager using editor.xml
You can integrate your property editor into the Site Manager using the
attribute editorClass
of the Property
element as shown in
Example 4.6, “How to integrate a property editor”.
<Documents> ... <Document type="SomeType"> <Property name="Locale" editorClass="com.customer.example.editor.LocaleEditor"/> </Document> ... </Documents>
Example 4.6. How to integrate a property editor
Example
The following example shows a property editor which extends the ComboBoxStringEditor. The property editor adds all available locales to the combo box from which the user can select one.
package com.customer.example.editor;
import java.util.Locale;
import hox.corem.editor.toolkit.property.ComboBoxStringEditor;
public class LocaleEditor extends ComboBoxStringEditor {
public LocaleEditor() {
super.setFixedChoice(true);
Locale[] l = Locale.getAvailableLocales();
for (int i = 0; i<l.length; i++)
{ addHistoryItem(l[i].toString()); }
} // LocaleEditor()
public void setFixedChoice(boolean b) { /* ignore! */ }
}
Example 4.7. Example of a property editor