Probably need to see the code.

On Monday, December 15, 2014 12:36:16 PM UTC-5, clara wrote:
>
> Hello Anthony,
>
> It did work!!! Thanks ! 
>
> Now, something does not work well when adding records into the grid 
> component: I restrict the "owner" so that the record should be appended to 
> the same grid. Now I enter the record, it gets recorded successfully but 
> the grid (in which I added the record) updates to the largest ID (it looks 
> like the last grid in the view). If I refresh the view, everything is in 
> order. Do I need to do something else? Could this be a bug?
>
> I can send the code in if needed. Thanks again for the great support.
>
> Clara
>
>
>
> El lunes, 15 de diciembre de 2014 12:19:36 UTC-3, Anthony escribió:
>>
>> The way you're doing it (with the adjustment I suggested) should work. 
>> Are you still having problems?
>>
>> Anthony
>>
>> On Monday, December 15, 2014 9:25:27 AM UTC-5, clara wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello Anthony,
>>>
>>> Thanks for your reply. I am trying to pass *itemid* to the component. 
>>> How do I do that?
>>>
>>> Basically imagine a model like>
>>> db.define_table('person',
>>>                 Field('firstname'),
>>>                 Field('lastname'), format='%(firstname)s %(lastname)s')
>>> db.define_table('dog',
>>>                 Field('name'),
>>>                 Field('owner',db.person))
>>>
>>> and what I want to generate is a view where there is every person listed 
>>> and each person has a grid below with the dogs it owns. I figured 
>>> components would be the best approach, but I don't know how to pass a 
>>> parameter (the owner ID, for the example model) to the component. 
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>>
>>> Clara
>>>
>>>
>>> El domingo, 14 de diciembre de 2014 23:43:24 UTC-3, Anthony escribió:
>>>>
>>>> The grid makes use of URL args, so if the base URL of the grid action 
>>>> also includes args, you must tell the grid to preserve those extra-grid 
>>>> args via its "args" argument:
>>>>
>>>> form = SQLFORM.grid(db.address.client == itemid, args=request.args[:1])
>>>>
>>>> Anthony
>>>>
>>>> On Sunday, December 14, 2014 2:54:06 PM UTC-5, clara wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hello,
>>>>>
>>>>> I would like to see an example of a component with an argument. I 
>>>>> tried it with no luck, If I define the component without arguments it 
>>>>> works 
>>>>> fine but if I add an argument loading the page that has the component 
>>>>> leads 
>>>>> to some kind of infinite recursion. Any help on this would be 
>>>>> appreciated. 
>>>>> To be more explicit:
>>>>>
>>>>> in the controller: 
>>>>> @auth.requires_login()
>>>>> def component_action():
>>>>>     itemid = request.args(0)
>>>>>     form = SQLFORM.grid(db.address.client==itemid)
>>>>>     return dict(form=form)
>>>>>
>>>>> in views:
>>>>> I create a "component_action.load":
>>>>>
>>>>> <div class="manage_things2">
>>>>> {{=form}}
>>>>> </div>
>>>>>
>>>>> I use the component in another action adding to the action's HTML:
>>>>> {{=LOAD('default','component_action.load',args=2, ajax=True)}}
>>>>>
>>>>> Is there anything awefully wrong in this?
>>>>>
>>>>> I will appreciate your help. Thanks!
>>>>>
>>>>> Clara
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>

-- 
Resources:
- http://web2py.com
- http://web2py.com/book (Documentation)
- http://github.com/web2py/web2py (Source code)
- https://code.google.com/p/web2py/issues/list (Report Issues)
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"web2py-users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to