Pregunta

I have the following HTML:

<table>
    <thead>
        <tr>
            <th>Id</th>
            <th>Name</th>
            <th>Description</th>
            <th>Actions</th>
        </tr>
    </thead>
    <tbody>
        <tr>
            <td>1</td>
            <td>Item 1</td>
            <td>Description of Item 1</td>
            <td>
                <a href="#" data-action="edit" data-item-id="1">Edit</a>
                <a href="#" data-action="delete" data-item-id="1">Delete</a>
            </td>
        </tr>
        <tr>
            <td>2</td>
            <td>Item 2</td>
            <td>Description of Item 2</td>
            <td>
                <a href="#" data-action="edit" data-item-id="2">Edit</a>
                <a href="#" data-action="delete" data-item-id="2">Delete</a>
            </td>
        </tr>
    </tbody>
</table>

The table rows (tr elements) are added dynamically.

I wire up a click event to all Edit links like this:

void wireUpTableEvents() {
  var editLinks = queryAll('#order-items table tbody [data-action="edit"]');

  editLinks.forEach((element) {
    element.on.click.add((event){
      print(element.attributes['data-item-id']);
    });
  });
}

As said above, the table rows (tr elements) are added dynamically so the above code only works if I call wireUpEvents after I execute the method which adds the rows.

Does anyone know the syntax or adding a event listener to elements using DART's on.click.add() when the elements are dynamcially added in the future?

I tried checking the DART documentation but the documentation on Event Listeners is blank.

If I would be using jQuery I could be using something similar to:

$("#order-items table")on("click", "tbody [data-action="edit"]", function(){...})

...but I want to write my sample app only using DART.

Edit
Though future sounds great for callbacks it seemed slightly overkill for what I needed as there is no long running task in my scenario.

The closest I was able to get to attach my event listener to a static element but processing the click events of future sub-elements was this:

void wireUpTableEvents() {
    var tableBody = query('#order-items table tbody');

    // Attach Event Listener to the static tbody, which always exists.
    tableBody.on.click.add((event) {
        var clickedElement = event.srcElement;
        var itemId = clickedElement.attributes['data-item-id'];

        // Check if the clicked element was either one of the edit links or one of the delete links.
        switch (clickedElement.attributes['data-action']) {
        case 'edit':
            // Replace print with calling a method to process edit request for this item.
            print('processing edit click from item with id: $itemId');
            break;
        case 'delete':
            // Replace print with calling a method to process delete request for this item.
            print('processing delete click from item with id: $itemId');
            break;
        }
    });
}​

The above code can execute before any of the actual tr elements are loaded and still works after the tr elements are loaded at some unknown later stage.

I also found that it now covers any dynamically added row, pre-loaded ones as well as other dynamically added ones for new records etc.

¿Fue útil?

Solución

It sounds like you need to use Dart's Future object. John Evans has a recent post that gives an excellent overview. I'll try to give a simple example:

Let's say I have a class called htmlInDart which I call as follows:

void main() {
  var htmlExample = new HtmlInDart().createStyles();
  htmlExample
      ..then((htmlExample) => htmlExample.buildPage())
      ..then((htmlExample) => htmlExample.addListeners());
}

The class might look something like this:

class htmlInDart {

  htmlInDart();

  Future<htmlInDart> createStyles() {
    final c = new Completer();
    // create some styles
    c.complete(this);
    return c.future;
  }

  Future<htmlInDart> buildPage() {
    final c = new Completer();
    // build the page
    c.complete(this);
    return c.future;
  }

  Future<htmlInDart> addListeners() {
    final c = new Completer();
    // add some listeners
    c.complete(this);
    return c.future;
  }

Hopefully this gives you some idea of how to implement it for your case.

Otros consejos

Is there any reason you can't add the callback when you are adding the rows in the first place? Something like:

void addRow(TableElement table, ...) {
    TableRowElement item = new TableRowElement();

    ...

    table.nodes.add(item);
    item.on.click.add((callback) { });
}
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