Can I display data from the database without using the create method?
Only a view in a tree views and after modification I use create method to persist in the database.
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This would be useful when trying to add many views without having to consider the proper order when creating them, or creating a view before the referenced table even exists.
CREATE OR REPLACE FORCE VIEW doesn't work
Is there any way to know if create method is called directly from selection list field?
I have to extend create method (The context not contains this information).
In my Sencha Touch 2 application I have an HTML table in a view which has its ID. What I'm trying to do is do some actions, load store, create another table and append it to the existing table - without changing the view. I have no problems with making the request, creating the second table on the fly, etc, however I need to figure out how one table can be appended to another in terms of Sencha Touch? Is there an "appendTo()" function like, say, jQuery has and how can I use it? I basically need to get the table by its ID and append the new table to it. But don't know how to do that in Sencha Touch 2. Any help is greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
It depends what your view extends but if it's extending an xtype:panel then you can use getHtml() to get the existing content and then setHtml() to update it.
I have a Cocoa App that I have manually added core data to. I setup the table in Interface Builder to list the entities from the data (with NSArrayController), and this is working just fine. The problem is when I insert a new entity (via code) the table does not update until I restart the app.
What do I have to do after inserting an entity and saving the context to get the table to automatically pick up the changes?
I'll assume you mean you want to update your array controller's contents, allowing the table to update as a result.
Short answer: Send your array controller a -fetch: message.
Longer answer: Only entity instances added through an array controller automatically show up in its contents array when it gets its contents via a straight fetch request (ie, when its contents array isn't bound to anything, but rather you set an entity name and a MOC, possibly a predicate, and nothing else).
I'd like to be able to click a check box on each of my Outlook Calendar Meeting Invites that would disable the "Reminder" if unchecked (a.k.a. set the Reminder value = None).
Example of Photoshop mock up:
Any suggestions?
It looks like you need to customize the current view of the Explorer/Folder objects. The Currentview property of the Folder or Explorer class returns a View object representing the current view. To obtain a View object for the view of the current Explorer, use Explorer.CurrentView instead of the CurrentView property of the current Folder object returned by Explorer.CurrentFolder.
The View object allows you to create customizable views that allow you to better sort, group and ultimately view data of all different types. There are a variety of different view types that provide the flexibility needed to create and maintain your important data.
The table view type (olTableView) allows you to view data in a simple field-based table.
The Calendar view type (olCalendarView) allows you to view data in a calendar format.
The card view type (olCardView) allows you to view data in a series of cards. Each card displays the information contained by the item and can be sorted.
The icon view type (olIconView) allows you to view data as icons, similar to a Windows folder or explorer.
The timeline view type (olTimelineView) allows you to view data as it is received in a customizable linear time line.
Views are defined and customized using the View object's XML property. The XML property allows you to create and set a customized XML schema that defines the various features of a view.
The XML definition describes the view type by using a series of tags and keywords corresponding to various properties of the view itself. When the view is created, the XML definition is parsed to render the settings for the new view.
To determine how the XML should be structured when creating views, you can create a view by using the Outlook user interface and then you can retrieve the XML property for that view.
To programmatically add a custom field to a view, use the Add method of the ViewFields object. This is the recommended way to dynamically change the view over setting the XML property of the View object.
Note, if you are adding a custom property to the ViewFields collection, the property must exist in the UserDefinedProperties collection for the View’s parent folder.