Showing extra data for Grid rows
Some data might not be suitable to be shown as part of a regular Grid, e.g. because it’s too large to fit into a Grid cell or because it’s secondary information that should only be shown on demand. This kind of situation is covered with the row details functionality that shows a Vaadin Component in an area expanded below a specific row. Using this functionality is a two step process: first you need to implement a generator that lazily creates the Component
for a row if it has been expanded, and then you need to hook up the events for actually expanding a row.
This example uses the same data as in the Using Grid with a Container example.
DetailsGenerator
A details generator is a callback interface that Grid calls to create the Vaadin Component
that is used for showing the details for a specific row. In this example, we create a layout that contains a label, an image and a button that all use data from the row.
Java
grid.setDetailsGenerator(new DetailsGenerator() {
@Override
public Component getDetails(RowReference rowReference) {
// Find the bean to generate details for
final GridExampleBean bean = (GridExampleBean) rowReference.getItemId();
// A basic label with bean data
Label label = new Label("Extra data for " + bean.getName());
// An image with extra details about the bean
Image image = new Image();
image.setWidth("300px");
image.setHeight("150px");
image.setSource(new ExternalResource("http://dummyimage.com/300x150/000/fff&text=" + bean.getCount()));
// A button just for the sake of the example
Button button = new Button("Click me", new Button.ClickListener() {
@Override
public void buttonClick(ClickEvent event) {
Notification.show("Button clicked for " + bean.getName());
}
});
// Wrap up all the parts into a vertical layout
VerticalLayout layout = new VerticalLayout(label, image, button);
layout.setSpacing(true);
layout.setMargin(true);
return layout;
}
});
Opening the details for a row
Since there are multiple different UI patterns for how details should be opened (e.g. clicking a button in a cell or double clicking anywhere on the row), Grid does not have any action enabled by default. You can instead implement your own listener that takes care of showing and hiding the details for the rows. One easy way of doing this is to add an item click listener that toggles the status whenever a row is double clicked.
Java
grid.addItemClickListener(new ItemClickListener() {
@Override
public void itemClick(ItemClickEvent event) {
if (event.isDoubleClick()) {
Object itemId = event.getItemId();
grid.setDetailsVisible(itemId, !grid.isDetailsVisible(itemId));
}
}
});
Full example
Putting all these pieces together, we end up with this class that uses the same data as in the Using Grid with a Container example.
Java
import com.vaadin.event.ItemClickEvent;
import com.vaadin.event.ItemClickEvent.ItemClickListener;
import com.vaadin.server.ExternalResource;
import com.vaadin.server.VaadinRequest;
import com.vaadin.ui.Button;
import com.vaadin.ui.Button.ClickEvent;
import com.vaadin.ui.Component;
import com.vaadin.ui.Grid;
import com.vaadin.ui.Grid.DetailsGenerator;
import com.vaadin.ui.Grid.RowReference;
import com.vaadin.ui.Image;
import com.vaadin.ui.Label;
import com.vaadin.ui.Notification;
import com.vaadin.ui.UI;
import com.vaadin.ui.VerticalLayout;
public class ShowingExtraDataForRows extends UI {
@Override
protected void init(VaadinRequest request) {
final Grid grid = new Grid();
grid.setContainerDataSource(GridExampleHelper.createContainer());
grid.setDetailsGenerator(new DetailsGenerator() {
@Override
public Component getDetails(RowReference rowReference) {
// Find the bean to generate details for
final GridExampleBean bean = (GridExampleBean) rowReference.getItemId();
// A basic label with bean data
Label label = new Label("Extra data for " + bean.getName());
// An image with extra details about the bean
Image image = new Image();
image.setWidth("300px");
image.setHeight("150px");
image.setSource(new ExternalResource("http://dummyimage.com/300x150/000/fff&text=" + bean.getCount()));
// A button just for the sake of the example
Button button = new Button("Click me", new Button.ClickListener() {
@Override
public void buttonClick(ClickEvent event) {
Notification.show("Button clicked for " + bean.getName());
}
});
// Wrap up all the parts into a vertical layout
VerticalLayout layout = new VerticalLayout(label, image, button);
layout.setSpacing(true);
layout.setMargin(true);
return layout;
}
});
grid.addItemClickListener(new ItemClickListener() {
@Override
public void itemClick(ItemClickEvent event) {
if (event.isDoubleClick()) {
Object itemId = event.getItemId();
grid.setDetailsVisible(itemId, !grid.isDetailsVisible(itemId));
}
}
});
setContent(grid);
}
}