Never mind. You have the renders code in the example. But that approach is deprecated now?
Bob On Fri, May 7, 2010 at 2:41 PM, Robert Piotrowski <[email protected]>wrote: > I want to show results from SOLR in a "Google style". I have a grid style > finished, but the client wants it to look like Google..... > > I'd have to add some kind of yellow colored background for the "hit > highlighting". > > > Bob > > > On Fri, May 7, 2010 at 2:40 PM, Robert Piotrowski > <[email protected]>wrote: > >> Yes, that's one of the examples I was thinking about. How do you do that? >> >> >> >> Bob >> >> >> >> >> On Fri, May 7, 2010 at 1:55 PM, Greg Brown <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Hi Robert, >>> >>> A skin defines the L&F of a component. A renderer is used by the skin to >>> draw the component's content. For example, the Terra PushButton skin draws >>> itself as a gray box with a border, but the skin uses the (default) renderer >>> to draw the button's icon and text. >>> >>> Not quite sure what you mean by "selectable list of text areas". Maybe >>> you could describe the use case a little more specifically? Are you thinking >>> of something like what is shown in this tutorial? >>> >>> http://pivot.apache.org/tutorials/web-queries.html >>> >>> Note that, while support for rich text is currently stubbed out in >>> TextArea, it isn't actually supported. The classes and APIs that would have >>> supported it are deprecated for Pivot 1.5 and will be removed in Pivot >>> 1.5.1. The best way to create text with different fonts and font sizes is to >>> use a combination of Labels and layout containers such as TablePane and >>> BoxPane. >>> >>> Hope this helps. >>> >>> Greg >>> >>> On May 7, 2010, at 1:56 PM, Robert Piotrowski wrote: >>> >>> > What's the difference between a skin and a renderer? >>> > >>> > If I wanted to have a selectable list of textareas and each textarea >>> had sections with different fonts and font sizes (to make it look like >>> HTML), which direction do I take? >>> > >>> > I was looking at the ListViewItemRenderer and I don't see where I'd be >>> the logic "magic" is for setting something like this at the text level >>> inside a textarea. What goes into the render()/renderStyles() method? >>> > >>> > Thanks, >>> > >>> > Robert >>> >>> >> >
