Denys Vuika 7a5350a06d
reduce duplication and code improvements (#1707)
* reduce code duplication

* reduce duplication, fix license headers

* simplify code

* typings fixes

* update tests

* minor fixes

* markdown fixes

* revert changes
2020-12-11 15:47:17 +00:00

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Title
Title
Tutorials

Tutorials

Below are some short tutorials that cover common tasks.

Custom route with parameters

In this tutorial, we are going to implement the following features:

  • Update the Trashcan component to receive and log route parameters.
  • Create a new route that points to the Trashcan component and uses the main layout.
  • Create an action reference that allows redirecting to the new route.
  • Create a button in the New menu that invokes an action.

Update src/app/components/trashcan/trashcan.component.ts and append the following code to the ngOnInit body:

import { ActivatedRoute, Params } from '@angular/router';

@Component({...})
export class TrashcanComponent {

    constructor(
        // ...
        private route: ActivatedRoute
    ) {}

    ngOnInit() {
        // ...

        this.route.params.subscribe(({ nodeId }: Params) => {
            console.log('node: ', nodeId);
        });
    }

}

The code above logs the current route parameters to the browser console and is proof the integration works as expected.

Next, add a new route definition as in the example below:

{
  "$schema": "../../../extension.schema.json",
  "$version": "1.0.0",
  "$name": "plugin1",

  "routes": [
    {
      "id": "custom.routes.trashcan",
      "path": "ext/trashcan/:nodeId",
      "component": "your.component.id",
      "layout": "app.layout.main",
      "auth": ["app.auth"]
    }
  ]
}

The template above creates a new route reference with the id custom.routes.trashcan that points to the ext/trashcan/ route and accepts the nodeId parameter.

Also, we are going to use the default application layout (app.layout.main) and authentication guards (app.auth).

Next, create an action reference for the NAVIGATE_ROUTE application action and pass route parameters: /ext/trashcan for the path, and 10 for the nodeId value.

{
    "$schema": "../../../extension.schema.json",
    "$version": "1.0.0",
    "$name": "plugin1",

    "routes": [...],

    "actions": [
        {
            "id": "custom.actions.trashcan",
            "type": "NAVIGATE_ROUTE",
            "payload": "$(['/ext/trashcan', '10'])"
        }
    ]
}

Finally, declare a new menu item for the NEW button and use the custom.actions.trashcan action created above.

{
    "$schema": "../../../extension.schema.json",
    "$version": "1.0.0",
    "$name": "plugin1",

    "routes": [...],
    "actions": [...],

    "features": {
        "create": [
            {
                "id": "custom.create.trashcan",
                "type": "default",
                "icon": "build",
                "title": "Custom trashcan route",
                "actions": {
                    "click": "custom.actions.trashcan"
                }
            }
        ]
    }
}

Now, if you run the application, you should see a new menu item called "Custom Trashcan Route" in the "NEW" dropdown. Upon clicking this item you should navigate to the /ext/trashcan/10 route containing a Trashcan component.

Check the browser console output and ensure you have the following output:

node:  10

You have successfully created a new menu button that invokes your custom action and redirects you to the extra application route.

Dialog actions

In this tutorial, we are going to create an action that invokes a custom material dialog.

Please read more details on Dialog components here: Dialog Overview

Create a dialog

ng g component dialogs/my-extension-dialog --module=app

Update my-extension-dialog.component.ts:

import { Component } from '@angular/core';
import { MatDialogRef } from '@angular/material/dialog';

@Component({
  selector: 'aca-my-extension-dialog',
  templateUrl: './my-extension-dialog.component.html',
  styleUrls: ['./my-extension-dialog.component.scss']
})
export class MyExtensionDialogComponent {
  constructor(public dialogRef: MatDialogRef<MyExtensionDialogComponent>) {}
}

Update my-extension-dialog.component.html:

<h2 mat-dialog-title>Delete all</h2>
<mat-dialog-content>Are you sure?</mat-dialog-content>
<mat-dialog-actions>
  <button mat-button mat-dialog-close>No</button>
  <!-- The mat-dialog-close directive optionally accepts a value as a result for the dialog. -->
  <button mat-button [mat-dialog-close]="true">Yes</button>
</mat-dialog-actions>

Create an action

Append the following code to the src/app/store/actions/app.actions.ts:

export const SHOW_MY_DIALOG = 'SHOW_MY_DIALOG';

export class ShowMydDialogAction implements Action {
  readonly type = SHOW_MY_DIALOG;
}

See also:

Create an effect

Update src/app/store/effects/app.effects.ts:

import { ShowMydDialogAction, SHOW_MY_DIALOG } from '../actions/app.actions';

@Injectable()
export class AppEffects {
  @Effect({ dispatch: false })
  showMyDialog$ = this.actions$.pipe(
    ofType<ShowMydDialogAction>(SHOW_MY_DIALOG),
    map(() => {})
  );
}

See also:

Update to raise a dialog

import { MatDialog } from '@angular/material/dialog';
import { MyExtensionDialogComponent } from '../../dialogs/my-extension-dialog/my-extension-dialog.component';

@Injectable()
export class AppEffects {
  constructor(private dialog: MatDialog) {}

  @Effect({ dispatch: false })
  showMyDialog$ = this.actions$.pipe(
    ofType<ShowMydDialogAction>(SHOW_MY_DIALOG),
    map(() => {
      this.dialog.open(MyExtensionDialogComponent)
    })
  );
}

Register a toolbar action

Update the src/assets/app.extensions.json file, and insert a new entry to the features.toolbar section:

{
  "features": {
    "toolbar": [
      {
        "id": "my.custom.toolbar.button",
        "order": 10,
        "title": "Custom action",
        "icon": "extension",
        "actions": {
          "click": "SHOW_MY_DIALOG"
        }
      }
    ]
  }
}

Now, once you run the application, you should see an extra button that invokes your dialog on every click.

File preview from a plugin with custom route

There might be scenarios where you build a plugin with a custom route, and from that route you might want to preview a file within an overlay. When having a plugin's entry point in a custom route, using the /view root-level application routes for previewing a file might be contradictory, since hitting any of these urls results a navigation away from the original route implying a reload of the original route's entry component when closing the preview panel (navigating back).

Example

Let's say you have a custom plugin with which you can start a process with any of your files. The plugin registers a custom route (start-process) with its entry component, where the user can start a process. In this component the user can fill in a form with different values for text fields and selectboxes and select a file. But for file selection, we would like to provide a preview functionality (with the PreviewComponent provided by the core application) to let the user be sure that the right file was selected. Obviously having a form filled in values (but not saved) means, that we don't want to loose our filled in data just because we are previewing a file. Because of this we would like the file preview to be opened in an overlay mode. The core application has one overlay region already defined for this reason, called viewer. This is the named router outlet we need to target without route change.

Solution

In our plugin we need to do the following steps:

Registering the custom route in the plugin.json

We need to add the custom route with our entry component and its child route for the preview:

{
  "routes": [
    {
      "id": "start-process",
      "path": "start-process",
      "parentRoute": "",
      "layout": "app.layout.main",
      // The component we register to be our entry point for this particular route
      "component": "myplugin.components.start-process",
      "children": [
        {
          "id": "start-process-preview",
          // It can be accessed on the "/start-process(viewer:preview/nodeId)" route
          "path": "preview/:nodeId",
          "component": "app.components.preview",
          "data": {
            // Using history.back() when closing the preview
            "navigateBackAsClose": true,
            // Disabling complex action and buttons for the preview
            "simplestMode": true
          },
          // We would like to target that named router outlet which is used for the viewer overlay
          "outlet": "viewer"
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}
Dispatching the right action within our component to open the file preview
import { PluginPreviewAction } from '@alfresco/aca-shared/store';

@Component({...})
export class StartProcessComponent {
  onFilePreview({ nodeId }) {
      this.store.dispatch(new PluginPreviewAction('start-process-cloud', nodeId));
  }
}