Problem Description
A developer needs to be able to develop a Rich Client Interface and avoid basic layout issues that tend to be pervasive across screens and applications. There are a number of low-level layout issues within ADFv that:
- Tend to repeat themselves across screens and across applications.
- Impact perception of usability, quality, and fit ‘n’ finish.
- Are annnoying to users in the aggregate – no single item is terrible, but a collection of items, repeating themselves on multiple screens gets frustrating and detracts from the message.
In most cases, there’s a simple approach and best practice that will assist developers in avoiding these pitfalls.
This document discusses basics of page layout and provides guidance to avoid common browser pitfalls, a recommended process for creating layouts, and illustrates layout examples.
Technical Pattern Description
This Layout Best Practices document is not necessarily a pattern but instead, a laundry list of known layout issues that are encountered when developing a Rich Client Interface and, how to avoid these pitfalls during application development.
Various ADF Components are described and demonstrated throughout this document including document, showDetailItem, decorativeBox, panelSplitter, panelStretchLayout, panelBorderLayout and so on. Not one component by itself but many are combined to achieve the desired layout for a page and / or an application.
Best Practices: The User Experience
To save a great deal of development grief and enjoy reduced maintenance costs:
- Never try to stretch something vertically when inside of a flowing (non-stretched) container. Attempting to do this will result in inconsistent behavior across web browsers.
- Never specify a height value with percent units. Instead, define such stretching declaratively as by following the process outlined below.
- Never use the "position" style.
- Take advantage of the layout pattern examples for guidance on how best to create a desired layout. Be sure to click on the "View Page Source" and the "View Template Source" links of the demo to see what tags and attributes are used as well as what the component structure looks like for each specific pages.
- Branding Bar
- Form Layout
- Navigation-Master-Detail
- Stretched Header
- Tiled Flowing
- Tiled Stretching
Process for Creating Layouts: Artifacts
- Create a stretchable outer frame
- Build up the outer structure of your page using a structure of components that support being stretched and also stretch their children.
-
Each layout or panel component's tag documentation will identify whether this is supported and how to achieve it in its
Geometry Management documentation. Some components have attributes to determine whether children will be stretched or not. For example:
document
has its maximized attribute. Try the maximized attribute NOT SET on the document component.
showDetailItem
has its stretchChildren attribute.
- Typically you would use various combinations of the
decorativeBox
,
panelSplitter
, and
panelStretchLayout
components inside of your
document
component to create the stretchable outer frame.
- Also, consider using
pageTemplates
, declarative components, and
regions
for reuse and centralized maintenance.
- Create flowing islands
- Inside of the stretchable structure created in step 1, you can create islands of flowing (non-stretched) components. To make this transition from stretching to flowing, use
panelGroupLayout
with
layout="scroll"
since it supports being stretched but will not stretch its children.
- For a reliable page layout:
- Do not specify heights using percent units.
- Do not use the position style.
- Do not attempt to stretch anything vertically inside of these flowing islands.
- Many leaf components do not make sense by themselves. For example, if you have a series of input components, you would never want to just place these in a
panelGroupLayout
because it would be much better for usability if you placed them in a
panelFormLayout
so the labels and fields align.
- A sample list of components that cannot be reliably stretched includes:
- Most input components
-
panelBorderLayout
-
panelFormLayout
-
panelGroupLayout
with
layout="default"
or
layout="horizontal"
-
panelHeader
with
type="flow"
- see the Stretched Header example for an situation where content below a header is stretched
-
panelLabelAndMessage
-
panelList
- Apache MyFaces Trinidad HTML Component -
tableLayout
- JSF HTML Component -
panelGrid
- Customize the appearance of components
- Appearance may be customized using the following mechanisms:
- Use themed decorativeBox components to organize your page layers with visual distinction and decorative borders as seen in some of the sample skins.
Note that not all skins have alternative themes so you may not see any distinction. If your decorativeBox components are not showing up with different colored backgrounds and you know that you are using a skin that has definitions for alternate themes, you might be missing a web.xml context-param setting for "oracle.adf.view.rich.tonalstyles.ENABLED" being set to false.
- Your document component also has a theme attribute so you can use it to change the main background styling of your page.
- Use a custom skin for consistently modified appearances if the existing skin doesn't provide all that you need.
- For instance-specific alternative styling, use the styleClass attribute. Keep the corresponding style definitions in an easy-to-maintain location such as in a custom skin, in the metaContainer facet of the document component, or in a style provided by the resource tag.
- As a last resort, use component attributes such as inlineStyle, contentStyle, and labelStyle. These are less declarative, harder to maintain, contribute more to the page's raw HTML size, and may not even be needed if one or more of the above mechanisms are used.
- Styles are directly processed by the web browser, which gives you a great deal of power but at the cost of being less declarative and error-prone. The browsers do not support all styles on all elements and certain combinations of styles produce non-obvious results. Here is some guidance on style configurations to avoid:
-
Component
|
Situations to Avoid
|
* |
An
inlineStyle with a
"height" value with
"%" units
|
* |
An
inlineStyle with a
"width" value between
"90%" and
"100%" (use
styleClass="AFStretchWidth" or
styleClass="AFAuxiliaryStretchWidth" instead)
|
* |
An
inlineStyle with
"height" ,
"top" , and
"bottom" values
|
* |
An
inlineStyle with
"width" ,
"left" , and
"right" values
|
* |
An
inlineStyle with a
"position" value
|
Child being stretched by a parent component |
An
inlineStyle with
"width" or
"height" values
|
*Note: Avoid when possible throughout.
- Scrolling:
- You should only have scrollbars around flowing island content. The recommended transition component for switching from a stretching outer frame into a flowing island is the
panelGroupLayout
with
layout="scroll"
. If the contents of this
panelGroupLayout
cannot fit in the space allocated, the browser will determine whether scrollbars are needed and will add them automatically.
- It is not recommended that you nest scrolling
panelGroupLayout
components because this will make the user see multiple scrollbars. Also, this should only be used at transitions from stretching to flowing areas and since you should not have stretching areas inside of flowing areas, you would generally never end up with nested scrollbars. It is best to minimize the number of areas that a user must scroll in order to see what he or she is looking to find. Take time to consider what scrolling the user will need. In cases where undesired scrollbars exist, you may want to simply change the layout attribute of that
panelGroupLayout
to
"vertical"
.
- There is a known scrolling issue that has been filed against Internet Explorer 7.0.5730.11. The issue is only resolved in Internet Explorer 8 when running in pure IE8 rendering mode. If a scrolling box has contents that are set to be as wide as the containing box and if the contents are large enough to warrant the need for a vertical scrollbar, an unnecessarily-needed horizontal scrollbar will be added. The browser is failing to adjust the width of the contents for the presence of the vertical scrollbar and thus a horizontal scrollbar appears. This horizontal scrollbar lets you scroll the small amount of space equal to the width of the vertical scrollbar. With this issue, it is not recommended to specify a width anywhere between 90% and 100%. Smaller widths will generally not encounter the bug. Workarounds (as seen in this page) involve setting the widths of the contents to be smaller than full width so that the browser has enough space for a vertical scrollbar to fit. For your convenience, a styleClass named
"AFStretchWidth"
is built into the skin to specify that a component with this styleClass will get a reduced width in Internet Explorer 7 or full width in other browsers. If you need a smaller size for an thin auxiliary column, you can alternatively use
"AFAuxiliaryStretchWidth"
or you may create a similar skin definition in your own skin like this:
-
@agent ie and (version: 7.0) {
.AFIEOverflowWorkaround75 {
width: 75%;
}
}
- Margins, borders, padding:
- Thanks to the browser's "CSS Box Model rules", it is much harder to define margins, borders, and padding on your components than what you might expect. Refer to the
Navigation-Master-Detail,
Tiled Flowing, and
Tiled Stretching layout pattern examples for various mechanisms to apply padding.
- In many cases, to apply these kinds of styles, you need to use multiple components together. In a scrolling area, adding an extra panelGroupLayout with layout="vertical" with the padding defined on it, inside of the outer layout="scroll" panelGroupLayout, will be required. In a stretching area, you may need to wrap a component inside of a panelStretchLayout with spacers in its top, start, end, and bottom facets for the padding.
Related Demos & Documentation
Demonstrations based on JDeveloper 11 Release 1 are available and illustrate much of the discussion above.