I like to have all the media queries at one place, usually in the App.css file because when I want to change something depending on the size I see all the components involved at once.
I am looking for a nice way to do so with styled components. There styles are usually attached to the file where the styled components are defined. I don't want to use wrappers to refer to them with className.
Does someone has a good way to handle this?
After a discussion following solution came up:
const reducer = (accumulated, [condition, css]) =>
accumulated +
`
#media(${condition}) {
${css[componentName]}
}
`
const addMedia = componentName => Object.entries(theme.media).reduce(reducer, "")
Now you have all the media queries at one place and you need just to add them within the styled component via:
${addMedia("componenName")}
I have a simple sass variables declarations as below
$theme-primary-dom: #181818ff
$theme-primary-sub: #29292Bff
$theme-secondary-dom: #FAFAFAff
$theme-secondary-sub: #C4C4C4ff
$theme-primary-sub-transparent: #29292B22
This is what I need for dark theme that is a default theme. BUt I want to add a light theme as well. In my brain it is very simple.
if .wrapper.darktheme{
$theme-primary-dom: #181818ff
$theme-primary-sub: #29292Bff
$theme-secondary-dom: #FAFAFAff
$theme-secondary-sub: #C4C4C4ff
$theme-primary-sub-transparent: #29292B22
} else {
$theme-primary-dom: #FAFAFAff
$theme-primary-sub: #C4C4C4ff
$theme-secondary-dom: #181818ff
$theme-secondary-sub: #29292Bff
$theme-primary-sub-transparent: #C4C4C422
}
Now I have no idea how to do this in SASS.
Also, I have
<button class="theme__switch theme__switch--light">theme is light</button>
in header component
and,
<div class="wrapper darktheme"></div>
in main app.vue. which increase complecations as the trigger button and the trigger area are in different components.
I can easily get this using jquery of course, But since I am using vue.cli, adding jquery code didn't felt right. I have been searching all over stackoverflow and google for past 3 days but I haven't found a relative solution yet.
Update #1: after the fix I commented about, now my app starts but the grid is not rendered except for its bounding box and filter button and popup. Yet, I get no error from the console, and as far as I can arrive with the debugger, I can see that data got from the server are OK. If I use Batarang, I can see the scope corresponding to my model, correctly filled with items. I updated the downloadable repro solution accordingly. Could anyone explain why ng-grid is not updating here?
I'm starting to play with ng-grid and TypeScript and I'm finding issues as soon as my test app starts up. See the bottom of this post for a link to a full test solution. Surely I have made tons of errors even in these few files, but I'd like to have something to start with and learn more step by step.
The MVC app has two client-side applications:
app.js for the default view (Home/Index). No typescript here, and the whole code is self-contained in this single file. The code is derived from the paging example in the ng-grid documentation and tries to stay as simplest as possible.
MyApp.js for the more realistic sample in another view (Home/Model). This sample uses services, models and controllers and its JS code is compiled from TypeScript. To keep things simple, I'm just storing these components under Scripts/App, in folders for Controllers, Models and Services, and each file contains just a single class or interface. The generated JS files are manually included in the view.
app.js works, except that it has issues with filtering. I posted about these here:
Server-side filtering with ng-grid: binding issue?
MyApp.js has startup issues with ng-grid. As soon as the app starts, a TypeError is thrown in the grid binding:
TypeError: Cannot set property 'gridDim' of undefined
at ngGridDirectives.directive.ngGridDirective.compile.pre (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/ng-grid-2.0.7.js:2708:37)
at nodeLinkFn (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:4392:13)
at compositeLinkFn (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:4015:15)
at nodeLinkFn (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:4400:24)
at compositeLinkFn (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:4015:15)
at publicLinkFn (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:3920:30)
at resumeBootstrapInternal (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:983:27)
at Object.$get.Scope.$eval (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:8057:28)
at Object.$get.Scope.$apply (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:8137:23)
at resumeBootstrapInternal (http://localhost:55203/Scripts/angular.js:981:15) <div ng-grid="gridOptions" style="height: 400px" class="ng-scope"> angular.js:5754
The only similar issue I found by googling is https://github.com/angular-ui/ng-grid/issues/60, but it does not seem to be related to my case as there the grid options were setup too late.
The server side just has an API RESTful controller returning server-paged, sorted and filtered items.
You can find the full repro solution here (just save, unzip and open; all the dependencies come from NuGet); see the readme.txt file for more information:
http://sdrv.ms/167gv0F
Just start the app and click MODEL in the upper right corner to run the TypeScript app throwing the error. The whole app is composed of 1 controller, 1 service and 1 model.
For starters like me, it would be nice to have a simple working example like this one. Could anyone help?
This error means gridOptions has not yet been defined by the time that Angular attempts to parse ng-grid="yourArray", where yourArray is the same array supplied to gridOptions. I had the same problem after refactoring a previously working ng-grid.
So gridOptions must be defined before the element which has ng-grid="yourArray" attribute applied to it (rather than within that element's own controller).
I resolved this by defining gridOptions in an outer element somewhere (on global/app scope, for instance).
P.S. Maybe there is a better way, but this has worked for me.
Where you are adding data to your grid?
If you are writing $scope.myGrid={data:"someObj"}; in a success call then it won't work.
See the below reason:(which is listed in https://github.com/angular-ui/ng-grid/issues/60)
You can't define the grid options in the success call. You need to define
them on the scope in your controller and then set the data or column
definitions, etc... from the success call.
What you have to do?, First is to see how this made your project and revizar if your queries or data access, the beams through a service, if so this I must add the file that manages routes app, the client side.
remain so.
'use strict';
angular.module('iseApp', [
'ngCookies',
'ngResource',
'ngSanitize',
'ngRoute',
**'ngGrid',**
'campaignServices',
'dialinglistServices',
'itemServices'
])
.config(function ($routeProvider, $locationProvider, $httpProvider) {
$routeProvider
As you are adding your ng-grid in a directive, you have to make sure the grid options are loaded before it tries to parse your html.
You could set a boolean in your link function :
scope.isDirectiveLoaded=true;
And then, in your template, use a ng-if :
<div ng-if="isDirectiveLoaded">
<div ng-grid="myGrid"/>
</div>
I got to the same issue, empty grid was rendered.
The way I got to it in the end was to setup my this.gridOptions in the constructor of the controller, within the component. In the options everything is referenced with $ctrl like this. So the data references $ctrl.gridData. gridData is specified as a property in my component controller. $ctrl is not defined as a property.
This was done in the constructor before the data was loaded. this.gridData was defined after in the constructor and then populated later in another function. The options were defined first, I think this is important from some things I read.
For the event hooks pass null instead of $scope.
this.gridOptions = {
enableGridMenu: true,
minRowsToShow: 25,
rowHeight: 36,
enableRowHashing: true,
data: '$ctrl.gridData',
rowTemplate: this.$rootScope.blockedRowTemplate,
onRegisterApi: ($ctrl) => {
this.gridApi = $ctrl;
this.gridApi.colMovable.on.columnPositionChanged(null, (colDef, originalPosition, newPosition) => {
this.saveState();
});
this.gridApi.colResizable.on.columnSizeChanged(null, (colDef, deltaChange) => {
this.saveState();
});
this.gridApi.core.on.columnVisibilityChanged(null, (column) => {
this.saveState();
});
this.gridApi.core.on.sortChanged(null, (grid, sortColumns) => {
this.saveState();
});
this.gridApi.core.on.filterChanged(null, (grid, sortColumns) => {
this.saveState();
});
}
};
In the row template I was referencing functions defined in my component. Before conversion to a component I referenced functions like this:
ng-click="grid.appScope.jumpToExport(row.entity);"
After conversion to the component I needed to add the $ctrl before the function name like this
ng-click="grid.appScope.$ctrl.jumpToExport(row.entity);"
And this is how the component is referenced in the html
<div ui-grid="$ctrl.gridOptions" ng-if="$ctrl.gridData.length != undefined && $ctrl.gridData.length > 0" class="data-grid" ui-grid-save-state ui-grid-resize-columns ui-grid-move-columns></div>
I'd like to add new group on the trac roadmap progress bar. To do this I've modified trac.ini file with:
# Definition of an 'rejected' group:
rejected = rejected
rejected.order = 2
rejected.css_class = my
rejected.label = rejected
where I've associated to css_class atribute value my.
Next I've created style.css file with one line only:
table.progress td.my { background: blue; }
The file style.css is read however the colour is not applied.
When I change back to the default one i.e.
rejected.css_class = new
the progress bar is updated and displaying yellow colour as expected.
However, it not displaying when I use
rejected.css_class = my
Any ides why?
First, for reference, the authoritative documentation on the subject is in trac.edgewall.org's wiki.
Now, did you try with other color expressions, like the common hex values, i.e. #BAE0BA (green Trac default for closed)? You could even try to set the full range of values for the background key like none repeat scroll 0 0 #BAE0BA.
Remember that CSS styles will override each other depending on the order in which they are encountered. The page may be loading your custom style correctly, but if another stylesheet is loaded after your style.css and that stylesheet includes any styles that conflict with yours, then the later stylesheet will override yours. Double-check that your custom stylesheet is being included and isn't being silently overridden by another stylesheet (I find the Firebug plugin for Firefox to be helpful in tracking down these sorts of issues).
the current theme is connected with
dojo.require("dojox.charting.themes.PlotKit.green");
I created my theme, saved it in the same folder and tried to add to page:
dojo.require("mytheme");
But it's not connecting this way.
If you created your own module, the easiest thing to do is to place it in the folder, which is a peer of dojo:
dojo/...
dijit/...
dojox/...
my/... <- your file goes there
For example, it is called "mytheme". In this case it should go into my/mytheme.js file. In order to use it just require it and set on your chart:
dojo.require("my.mytheme");
...
chart.setTheme(my.mytheme);
Don't forget to put dojo.provide("my.mytheme"); at the top of your theme file, and define my.mytheme object (your theme).
Alternatively include it inline like I did in http://lazutkin.com/download/hicharts.html (look for myTheme). Or you can include the snippet using a regular <script> tag.
Do not forget to set your new theme explicitly on a chart: chart.setTheme(your_theme_object).