Best Optical Illusion… EVER!

Posted in Miscellaneous on October 23rd, 2008 by Kalen Gibbons

I’m a big fan of optical illusions. I love how your eyes and your mind don’t always agree on things, and this is a great illustration of that.

In the picture below, square A and square B are the exact same color. You may find this hard to believe; I still do when I look at it, but it’s true. To prove it, take any image program or a colorpicker, like ColorZilla, and compare the colors. ColorZilla shows that both cells are the color #787878. Furthermore, I took this image into PhotoShop, cut out square B and overlapped it over square A… guess what? They match. Click here to see the results.

Optical Illusion

Can you get your eyes to see the truth?


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Disappearing data in your itemRenderer?

Posted in ActionScript, Bugs, Flex on October 14th, 2008 by Kalen Gibbons

Note: An update to this post has been posted here. It provides a better solution than the one offered below, so I recommend you check it out.

Although I love Flex, it can still be a bit buggy at times. I was working with an itemRenderer the other day and came across some very odd behavior. I had a list using an itemRenderer and when the data originally loaded everything was fine, but whenever I scrolled some of the data started disappearing. You can see this demonstrated in the sample below.


<mx:List dataProvider="{myData.item}"

variableRowHeight="true"
alternatingItemColors="['#FFFFFF','#E6EEF3']"
width="100%"
height="100%">

 

<mx:itemRenderer>

<mx:Component>

<mx:VBox verticalGap="0">

<mx:HBox>

<mx:Label text="{data.Label}" fontWeight="bold" />
<mx:Label text="{data.date}" color="#999999" />

</mx:HBox>
<mx:Text text="{data.description}" width="100%" />

</mx:VBox>

</mx:Component>

</mx:itemRenderer>

</mx:List>

Apparently, Flex likes to have all the items in a list the same height; so when an item such as the Text field in the example causes variation, Flex simply doesn’t display it. I found that the easiest way to remedy the issue was to set explicit heights for the items in the renderer. Here is an example of how it works with the height explicitly set:


<mx:List dataProvider="{myData.item}"

variableRowHeight="true"
alternatingItemColors="['#FFFFFF','#E6EEF3']"
width="100%"
height="100%">

 

<mx:itemRenderer>

<mx:Component>

<mx:VBox verticalGap="0">

<mx:HBox>

<mx:Label text="{data.Label}" fontWeight="bold" />
<mx:Label text="{data.date}" color="#999999" />

</mx:HBox>
<mx:Text text="{data.description}" width="100%" height="30" />

</mx:VBox>

</mx:Component>

</mx:itemRenderer>

</mx:List>

Now, this isn’t a perfect solution. What we are doing here is effectively the same thing as setting variableRowHeight to false; thus making all the items in the List the same height. So if anybody has a better solution for this issue please let me know.


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Simple string replacement with RegExp and Apex

Posted in How-To on October 8th, 2008 by Kalen Gibbons

Sometimes it’s hard to figure out even simple thing in a proprietary language like Apex. So here is a simple solution to a common problem.

How do I replace string elements using Regular Expressions in Apex?

//create expression as Pattern
Pattern dollarPattern = Pattern.compile(‘[,$]‘);

//replace all occurrences in a string
dollarPattern.matcher(‘$1,250.25′).replaceAll();

You need to use Apex’s Pattern class to create the regular expression. Then you can replace all matches in the string using the replaceAll() method.

This example takes a dollar formatted string ($1,250.25) and removes the dollar sign and comma to turn it into a number. The result would be 1250.25, perfect for database insertion or what have you.


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How to determine if a DataGrid or List has ScrollBars

Posted in ActionScript, Flex, How-To on October 5th, 2008 by Kalen Gibbons

There are occasions when you need to programmatically determine if a List or DataGrid has enough rows to require ScrollBars. If your DataGrid, for example, does not have an explicit rowCount or height specified, then it’s not as easy as looking at its data provider.

The easiest way I’ve found it to use the “maxVerticalScrollPosition” property, which the Flex 3 Language Reference describes as:

“The maximum value for the verticalScrollPosition property. Note that this is not the height of the content because the maxVerticalScrollPosition property contains the height of the content minus the height of the displayable area.”

So if the the maxVerticalScrollPosition is greater than zero, then scrollbars must be available.

if(myDataGrid.maxVerticalScrollPosition > 0){
// is scrollable
}else{
// not scrollable
}

If anybody know of an easier or more efficient way of determine if a List has ScrollBars, please let me know.


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