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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/WICKET-1085?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#action_12536193
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seitz edited comment on WICKET-1085 at 10/19/07 5:10 AM:
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1) i used an integer model-object in my example, but as you said, the component
would need a converter.
2) yes, it is the javascript
i tried to implement it as a behavior that expects the bound component to
implement ITextFormatProvider to get the input mask,
but i haven't found a way to "inject" a converter into the component form
inside the behavior. maybe it was just too late ;)
update:
william, these problems are probably easier to solve if there is a dedicated
component (eg. MaskedTextField).
as i said above, i tried the more "lightweight" approach to use the mask also
for currently existing TextField subclasses (eg. DateTextField in
wicket-datetime). in this case, you don't always have the luxury to say that
the modelobject should be a string, since you can't alter the components
internals from outside.
maybe i'm just overlooking something and overcomplicating it, so i can be
totally wrong.
was (Author: seitz):
1) i used an integer model-object in my example, but as you said, the
component would need a converter.
2) yes, it is the javascript
i tried to implement it as a behavior that expects the bound component to
implement ITextFormatProvider to get the input mask,
but i haven't found a way to "inject" a converter into the component form
inside the behavior. maybe it was just too late ;)
> Input Text Mask
> ---------------
>
> Key: WICKET-1085
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/WICKET-1085
> Project: Wicket
> Issue Type: New Feature
> Components: wicket-extensions
> Reporter: Will Hoover
> Assignee: Frank Bille Jensen
> Priority: Trivial
> Attachments: inputTextMask.js
>
>
> Allow developers to designate a keystroke input pattern for the input text
> component. The pattern would be used on the client to control valid
> keystrokes for the current cursor position within the input text field in
> relation to the specified pattern.
> For example, a pattern could be designated as "(999)-9999" causing only
> number values in each position where a "9" appears and using the "(", ")",
> and "-" as masking characters. When the cursor position reached one of these
> mask characters the cursor position would advance to the next "9" position.
> The resulting mask would appear as "(___)___-____" within the input text
> value.
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