
Introduction
My last piece on a collapsible EditorZone got me really going. This time I’ll show how to create a CatalogZone
which displays a dropdown combobox instead of a list of checkboxes.
There are two main components which need to interact to make this possible. A class derived from CatalogZone
takes care of rendering the header and footer. This class is called DropDownCatalogZone
. The header shows an informative title. The footer is used to display a dropdown combobox which can be used to select a WebPartZone
to add the WebPart to. The footer also shows the ‘Add’ and ‘Close’ buttons used to add a WebPart from the catalog to the page and to close the zone again. For each CatalogPart
which is displayed in the CatalogZone
, a dropdown combobox is rendered by a class derived from CatalogPartChrome
called DropDownCatalogPartChrome
.
First let’s examine the DropDownCatalogPartChrome
class. It contains one method used to render a CatalogPart
. This method is displayed in figure 1. The implementation takes the following steps:
- Get the WebPart descriptions stored in the
CatalogPart
.
- Create a
DropDownList
.
- Attach the ID of the list to a preformatted ID in the
CatalogZone
. (I’ll explain the why later.)
- Add each WebPart description to the
DropDownList
.
- Render the list.
public override void RenderCatalogPart(HtmlTextWriter writer,
CatalogPart catalogPart)
{
WebPartDescriptionCollection partDescriptions =
catalogPart.GetAvailableWebPartDescriptions();
DropDownList list = new DropDownList();
list.Width = new Unit(150, UnitType.Pixel);
list.ID = ((DropDownCatalogZone)Zone).ModuleSelectorControlID;
foreach (WebPartDescription description in partDescriptions)
{
list.Items.Add(new ListItem(description.Title, description.ID));
}
writer.Write("Select a module:");
list.RenderControl(writer);
}
The interesting bit about this code is the use of the CatalogZone
to provide the ID for the DropDownList
. This is necessary because the Chrome
class doesn’t load postback data itself, the DropDownCatalogZone
loads this data based on the ID. By using it on the DropDownList
, the DropDownCatalogZone
is able to load the WebPartDescription
of the selected item in the list.
The DropDownCatalogZone
contains the bulk of the code. It will need to perform the following tasks:
- Create an instance of
DropDownCatalogPartChrome
.
- Render the header and footer.
- Handle postback data sent by the
DropDownCatalogPartChrome
class.
- Handle postback data sent by the buttons shown in the footer.
The first step is easy enough. A simple override of the CreateCatalogPartChrome
is sufficient. The rendering of the header is trivial as well, it only writes a title to the output stream.
The third and fourth steps are more of a challenge. The DropDownCatalogZone
will need to override the LoadPostData
and RaisePostBackEvent
methods. The LoadPostData
method is used to load the selected WebPart and the selected WebPartZone from the posted values.
protected override bool LoadPostData(string postDataKey,
NameValueCollection postCollection)
{
_selectedPart = postCollection[ModuleSelectorControlID];
_selectedZone = postCollection[ZoneSelectorControlID];
return false;
}
The selected WebPart is loaded using the same key as used by the DropDownCatalogPartChrome
class to render the DropDownList
. The DropDownList
which is rendered in the footer uses the same mechanism as used by the DropDownCatalogPartChrome
class, but it uses a different ID, the ZoneSelectorControlID
.
The RaisePostBackEvent
method only needs to verify whether the postback is performed by the ‘Add’ button, and take the necessary actions to actually add the WebPart to the WebPartZone.
protected override void RaisePostBackEvent(string eventArgument)
{
if (eventArgument == ((DropDownCatalogVerb)AddVerb).EventArgument &&
AddVerb.Visible && AddVerb.Enabled)
{
WebPartZoneBase zone = base.WebPartManager.Zones[_selectedZone];
WebPartDescriptionCollection descriptions =
SelectedCatalogPart.GetAvailableWebPartDescriptions();
WebPart webPart = SelectedCatalogPart.GetWebPart(
descriptions[_selectedPart]);
WebPartManager.AddWebPart(webPart, zone, 0);
}
base.RaisePostBackEvent(eventArgument);
}
The rest of the code found in the DropDownCatalogZone
class is plumbing to wire up the ‘Add’ and ‘Remove’ buttons and handle their state management.
Just a few little steps were required to change the default behavior of the CatalogZone
, happy coding!
Wouter van Vugt is a Microsoft MVP with Office Open XML technologies and an independent consultant focusing on creating Office Business Applications (OBAs) with SharePoint, the Office 2007 system and related .NET technologies. Wouter is a frequent contributor to developer community sites such as OpenXmlDeveloper.org and MSDN and has published several white papers and articles as well a book available on line titled Open XML: the markup explained. Wouter is the founder of Code-Counsel, a Dutch company focusing on delivering cutting-edge technical content through a variety of channels. You can find out more about Wouter by reading his blog and visiting the Code-Counsel Web site.