Studio Developer Manual / Version 2301
Table Of Contents
For defining a custom filter, you can inherit from the class FilterPanel
. This
class implements the interface SearchFilter
and provides the framework for
implementing a custom filter easily.
The state of a search filter is stored in a model bean provided by the method getStateBean()
and is persisted in the preferences struct.
See section Section 9.9, “Storing Preferences” for details
In your SearchFilter
class, you need to override two methods.
The method buildQuery()
can
use the current state stored in the model bean to assemble a Solr query string. Query strings
from individual filters will be combined using the AND
operator. By returning an
empty string or null
, you can indicate that the filter should not currently
impose any restrictions on the search result. The following example shows how a property
foo
is retrieved and how a query is built from it.
import FilterPanel from "@coremedia/studio-client.main.editor-components/sdk/collectionview/search/FilterPanel"; class FooFilterPanelBase extends FilterPanel { //... override buildQuery(): string { const foo: Number = this.getStateBean().get("foo"); if (foo === 0) { return null; } return "foo:" + foo + " OR foo:-1"; } //... } export default FooFilterPanelBase;
The method getDefaultState()
returns an object mapping all properties of the
state bean to their defaults. It is used for initialization, for determining whether the
current state of your UI represents the filter's default state, and for manually resetting the
filter. In the above example, the respective filter's default state is represented by the
special value "0", and consequently, you must use "0" as the filter's default value:
class FooFilterPanelBase /*...*/ { //... override getDefaultState():any { return { foo:0 }; } }
Because the itemId
of the filter component is used when identifying the filter later on,
it often makes sense to specify the itemId
directly in the SearchFilter
subclass.
To synchronize your UI component(s) with the model state stored in the bean returned by
getStateBean()
, you might want to use the various existing bind plugins.