Print Fields Buttons: Difference between revisions

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Buttons can be added to your Business Rules! program to make user input more intuitive. Buttons are made by using the '''B''' attribute on a print fields statement. They set the FKEY value which then can be used to complete an action. Keep in mind that buttons depend on something being done within the program while BR waits for the button to be pushed by the user.  
Buttons can be added to your Business Rules! program to make user input more intuitive. Buttons are made by using the '''B''' attribute on a print fields statement. They set the FKEY value which then can be used to complete an action. Keep in mind that buttons depend on something being done within the program while BR waits for the button to be pushed by the user.  
help text (tool tips) can also be used on a button.


===Comments and Examples===
===Comments and Examples===

Latest revision as of 15:16, 21 May 2016

Buttons can be added to your Business Rules! program to make user input more intuitive. Buttons are made by using the B attribute on a print fields statement. They set the FKEY value which then can be used to complete an action. Keep in mind that buttons depend on something being done within the program while BR waits for the button to be pushed by the user.

help text (tool tips) can also be used on a button.

Comments and Examples

Here, the "Done" button is clicked after the user has selected the desired items. It sets FKEY to 99 and continues with to the program to WRITE a record to the file.

00340     print fields "23,30,CC 8,,b99" : "Done"
00350     do
00360        input fields "22,14,CHECK 8,,10;23,14,CHECK 8,,11;24,14,CHECK  8,,12": Box$(1),Box$(2),Box$(3)
00370        print fields "24,1,N 2": Fkey
00380     loop While Fkey~=99
00390     For I=1 to UDIM(box$)
00400         if box$(I)(1:1)="^" then ordered(I)=1 else ordered(I)=0
00410     next I

Line 340 prints the button. The DO LOOP on lines 350 to 380 give the button an action to wait for: printing the Check Boxes and waiting for them to be selected. The For/Next statements in lines 390 to 410 records which checkboxes were chosen.

In this example, the user can click "Yes" (which sets the FKEY value to 8 and displays the next record in the file, or "Quit", which sets the FKEY value to 9 and will end the program.

00011     open #1: "name=orders.INT, kfname=firstlast.int,kps=1,kln=60", internal, input, keyed
00012     print fields "17,2,c 15":"Next record?"
00013     print fields "18,2,cc 10,,b8":"Yes"
00014     print fields "18,14,cc 10,,b9":"Quit"
00015  !
00016      read #1, using READFORM, search=Lastname$: First$,Last$,Address$,City$,State$,Zipcode$,Shipmethod$,Item1,Item2,Item3
00017    READFORM: form C 30,C 30,C 30,C 15,C 2,C 7,C 1,N 1,N 1,N 1
00018      print fields Mat Prinform$: "Name: ",First$," ",Last$,"Address: ",Address$,"City: ",City$,"State: ",State$,"Zipcode: ",Zipcode$
00019      print fields Mat Prinform2$: "Overnight or Regular? ",  Shipmethod$,"Item 1? ",Item1,"Item 2? ",Item2,"Item 3? ",Item3
00020  !
00021  !   Prinform2: Form "11,2,c 22","11,25,c 1","13,2,c 8","13, 12,n 1","14,2,c 8","14,12,n 1","15,2,c 8","15,12,n 1"
00022  again: !
00023      do
00024        input fields "24,1,c 1": nomatter$
00025      loop until fkey=8 or fkey=9
00026  !
00027     if FKEY=8 then
00028       read #1, using READFORM:  First$,Last$,Address$,City$,State$,Zipcode$,Shipmethod$,Item1,Item2,Item3
00029       print fields Mat Prinform$: "Name: ",First$," ",Last$,"Address: ",Address$,"City: ",City$,"State: ",State$,"Zipcode: ",Zipcode$
00030       print fields Mat Prinform2$: "Overnight or Regular? ", Shipmethod$,"Item 1? ",Item1,"Item 2? ",Item2,"Item 3? ",Item3
00031       goto again
00032     else end

Lines 13 and 14 print the buttons, then the DO LOOP in lines 23 to 25 wait for the user to click on one or the other. The "Yes" button returns control to the program in lines 27 to 31, while if FKEY equals 9 or anything else, it ends, on line 32.

Syntax

The Button's syntax is the same as the Print Fields syntax below. However, the Field Spec parameter must also include a B attribute followed by the desired FKEY value, as shown below.

Print Fields Syntax
PRINT [#<window number>,] FIELDS {Mat <array name>|<string expression>|"<field spec>[;...]"} : {|Mat <array name>}[,...] [<error condition> <line ref>][,...]

Field Spec parameter for buttons
"<row>,<column> <form spec> <field length>, [<attributes>,] B <fkey>"

Parameters

Print Fields Parameters

The "#wind-num" parameter represents the file number of a window which has already been opened by an OPEN window statement. When this parameter is used, Business Rules! inputs to and outputs from the window as if it were a separate screen: the first row and column of the window are considered row 1 and column 1.

"FIELDS" is a required keyword which signals that data is to be printed to specific fields on the screen. It must be followed by one of three possible parameters, each of which defines the fields to be used for input.

The "MAT string-array" parameter indicates that multiple field definitions are located in the specified string array. The array must contain all the same elements that are identified in the "field-spec" parameter.

The "string expression" parameter may also be used to define the input fields, but its value must also contain all the same elements that are identified in the "field-spec" parameter.

The "field-spec" parameter represents a separate syntax (see below) that identifies the following for each input field: row number; column number; format type, length and fraction length (if required) of the data to be input; and the monochrome and/or color attributes which are to be used for the field (control attributes are ignored), in this case B gives the field its "button" look.

See Format Specifications and File I/O for information about the format specifications which may be used with the PRINT FIELDS statement.

After the required colon, at least one "data-item" or "MAT array-name" is required. These two parameters represent the words which will display on the button. Multiple variables must be separated by commas.

PRINT FIELDS provides error processing with the optional "error-cond line-ref" parameter. See Error Conditions for more information.

Field Spec Parameters

If the "string-expr" or "MAT string-array" parameters are used to specify the Field Spec definition, each must include the same elements identified below:

The "row" parameter is a required integer value that indicates the row number on the screen or in the window where the data is to be entered.

The "column" parameter is a required integer value that indicates the starting column number on the screen where data is to be entered.

The next set of parameters specifies the format type of the data to be entered. There are three possible routes. In the top route, "form-spec" represents either a numeric or string format specification. G, GL, GU, GZ, L, N, and NZ are all valid in this position for numeric fields; C, CC, CR, CL, CU, G, GL, GU, GZ, V, VL and VU are all valid in this position for string fields. The specification must be followed by a space.

The "field-length" parameter, which is an integer value that identifies the length (including decimal point and decimal positions) of the field, comes next. If the field contains decimal positions, "fraction" should identify how many there are; this parameter must be separated from the field length by a period (no spaces).

See Field specifications and Format specifications for additional information about all the format specifications listed in this section.

The "attributes" parameter represents an insertable syntax that identifies the appearance and control attributes that are to be used for the field. See Attribute (Screen) for details.

"B" will give the field it's button appearance and the following FKEY number will set the value which initiates the button's action. For example:

00050     print fields "10,5,cc 10,,b9":"Quit"

Will set the FKEY value to 9.

Defaults

1.) Output to the full screen (not a window).
2.) Interrupt the program if an error occurs and "ON error" is not active.
3.) Fraction length=0.
4.) Maximum DIM length.
5.) Use current attributes.

Technical Considerations

1.) Relevant error conditions are: CONV, ERROR, EXIT, HELP, IOERR, and SOFLOW.
2.) When OPTION INVP is in effect, the normal printing of commas and periods is interchanged in PIC, N, NZ, L, G and GZ format specifications to produce European-style numbers.
3.) See Functions for information about CNT, which applies to errors in field definition arrays used in full screen processing.