You can override setSelectedPaths(). If your TreeView is multi-select, you 
should also override addSelectedPath() and removeSelectedPath().

In event listener attributes, you can access the event arguments via an 
"arguments" array that is passed to the function. 

On Jun 6, 2010, at 11:00 PM, aappddeevv wrote:

> I was looking to wire up some selection processing once my nodes in a 
> TreeView are selected. I noticed that there is a listener list for that that 
> I can add a listener to but I did not see anything easy to use such as a 
> simple method I can override on the TreeView that is called when the 
> selection changes.
>  
> Is it expected that even subclasses of the actual class have to add a bunch 
> of boilerplate listeners to the controls to track these types of events? Is 
> there a default listener installed that translates the listener methods into 
> simple-to-override calls in the subclass?
>  
> I saw the tutorial on event listener attributes, but it was not clear how I 
> could simply, without a lot of specification or script tags, invoke a method 
> on my TreeView subclass with the arguments of the listener so I could process 
> the selection change event. What is in the bindings if the inline script is 
> executed and how to reference “this.”? How do I reference the argument of the 
> listener event e.g. the path that changed in this example?
>  
> Essentially, I just want my subclass’s method onSelectionPathAdded(Path 
> added) to be called which mostly mirrors the listener.

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