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<!doctype article PUBLIC "-//Davenport//DTD DocBook V3.0//EN" [
<!entity Evolution "<application>Evolution</application>">
<!entity ETable "<classname>ETable</classname>">
<!entity ETableModel "<classname>ETableModel</classname>">
<!entity ETableSimple "<classname>ETableSimple</classname>">
<!entity ETableHeader "<classname>ETableHeader</classname>">
<!entity ETableSpecification "<classname>ETableSpecification</classname>">
]>
<article class="whitepaper" id="e-table">
<artheader>
<title>The ETable Widget</title>
<authorgroup>
<author>
<firstname>Chris</firstname>
<surname>Lahey</surname>
<affiliation>
<address>
<email>clahey@helixcode.com</email>
</address>
</affiliation>
</author>
<author>
<firstname>Miguel</firstname>
<surname>de Icaza</surname>
<affiliation>
<address>
<email>miguel@helixcode.com</email>
</address>
</affiliation>
</author>
</authorgroup>
<copyright>
<year>2000</year>
<holder>Helix Code, Inc.</holder>
</copyright>
</artheader>
<sect1 id="introduction">
<title>Introduction</title>
<para>
&ETable; is a table widget on steroids. It is intended to provide
all the table functionality needed throughout &Evolution;, and
hopefully be general purpose enough to be used in other projects.
</para>
<para>
&ETable; provides a lot of interactive control over the data in the
table. Without any work from the programmer, &ETable; provides
rearrangeable columns and editable data. When finished, &ETable; will
also provide, again with no programmer intervention, easy interactive
sorting and grouping.
</para>
<para>
&ETable; gives you a great deal of functionality, flexibility, and
power. Most of this power is internal to the widget, but some of
the flexibility requires a bit of work by the programmer.
However, once you learn it, &ETable; is not very hard at all to
use.
</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="model">
<title>ETableModel</title>
<para>
The back end of &ETable; is an &ETableModel;. To use &ETable;
you have to create a subclass of &ETableModel;. However, to save
you the work of defining a new <classname>GtkClass</classname>,
there is a predefined subclass of &ETableModel; called
&ETableSimple; which simply takes a list of callbacks to perform
the various operations.
</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="columns">
<title>Columns</title>
<para>
There are two different meanings to the word "column". The first
is the model column. A model column corresponds to a specific
type of data. This is very much like the usage in a database
table where a column is a field in the database.
</para>
<para>
The second type of column is a view column. A view column
corresponds to a visually-displayed column. Each view column
corresponds to a specific model column, though a model column
may have any number of view columns associated with it
(including zero).
</para>
<para>
The view column does not necessarily depend on only one model
column. In some cases, the view column renderer can be given a
reference to another model column to get extra information about
its display. For example, a mail program could display deleted
messages with a line through them by creating a model column
with no corresponding view column that told whether or not the
message is deleted, and then having the text column
strikethrough the display if the invisible column had a value
corresponding to "deleted".
</para>
<para>
The view column also specifies a few other pieces of
information. One piece of information is the renderer. &ETable;
provides a number of renderers to choose from, or you can write
your own. Currently, there are renderers for text, image sets,
and checkboxes.
</para>
<para>
The view column also includes information about the header.
There are two types of headers: text, and pixbuf. The first
allows you to specify a string which is rendered in the header.
The second allows you to specify an image to copy into the
header.
</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="header">
<title>Header</title>
<para>
The &ETableHeader; represents the header information for the
table. The &ETableHeader; is used in two different ways. The
first is the in the <structfield>full_header</structfield>
element of an &ETable;. This is the list of possible columns in
the view. You add each of your columns to this &ETableHeader;
and then pass it into the &ETable;.
</para>
<para>
The second use is completely internal. &ETable; uses another
&ETableHeader; to store the actual displayed columns. Many of
the &ETableHeader; functions are for this purpose. The only
functions that users of the library should need to use are
<function>e_table_header_new</function> and
<function>e_table_header_add_col</function>.
</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="layout">
<title>Layout Specification</title>
<para>
&ETable; uses an &ETableSpecification; to layout the columns of
the widget. The &ETableSpecification; is specified as XML data
passed into the &ETable; as a string.
</para>
<para>
The most powerful part of the &ETableSpecification; is that when
finished, &ETable; will allow you to get a copy of an
&ETableSpecification; that describes the current view of the
tree. This allows the developer to save the current view so that
next time the user opens this table, they find it in exactly the
state that they left it.
</para>
<para>
The XML specification allows for a number of things. First, it
allows you to pick a set of default columns to be shown. Thus,
even if you had hundreds of pieces of data, you could choose to
only display a few that fit on the screen by default.
</para>
<para>
The second major thing that the &ETableSpecification; allows you
to specify is the column grouping and sorting. &ETable; has a
powerful mechanism for allowing the user to choose columns to
group by, thus allowing multiple columns of sorting, as well as
visual grouping of similar elements and interactive selection of
what data to display.
</para>
<para>
The grouping in &ETableSpecification; is specified as a
hierarchy of columns to group by. Each level of the hierarchy
lets you sort by a particular column, either ascending or
descending. All levels except the last cause the canvas to group
by the given column.
</para>
<para>
An example &ETableSpecification; follows.
</para>
<programlisting>
<ETableSpecification>
<columns-shown frozen_columns="2">
<column> 0 </column>
<column> 1 </column>
<column> 2 </column>
<column> 3 </column>
<column> 4 </column>
</columns-shown>
<grouping>
<group column="3" ascending="1">
<group column="4" ascending="0">
<leaf column="2" ascending="1"/>
</group>
</group>
</grouping>
</ETableSpecification>
</programlisting>
<para>
This example has 5 columns which are initially in order. It has
2 levels of grouping. The first is grouped by the 4th column
(all indexes are 0 based) and sorts those groups in ascending
order. Inside those groups, the data is grouped by the fifth
column and sorted in descending order of the fifth column.
Finally, the data in those groups is sorted by the third column
in ascending order. Due to the "frozen_columns" attribute on the
columns-shown element, the user will not be
able to rearrange the first two columns. They will always be the
first two.
</para>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="conclusion">
<title>Conclusion</title>
<para>
All in all, &ETable; is a very powerful widget. Once you learn
to use it, you have access to a vast amount of power requiring a
comparatively small amount of work.
</para>
</sect1>
</article>
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