----- Original Message -----
From: "Lior Vernia" <lvernia(a)redhat.com>
Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2013 12:15:14 PM
On 27/06/13 18:15, Einav Cohen wrote:
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Lior Vernia" <lvernia(a)redhat.com>
>> Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2013 10:38:04 AM
>>
>>
>>
>> On 27/06/13 16:42, Einav Cohen wrote:
>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> From: "Lior Vernia" <lvernia(a)redhat.com>
>>>> Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2013 8:53:59 AM
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On 27/06/13 15:37, Einav Cohen wrote:
>>>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>>>> From: "Eli Mesika" <emesika(a)redhat.com>
>>>>>> Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2013 6:46:58 AM
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>>>>> From: "Lior Vernia" <lvernia(a)redhat.com>
>>>>>>> To: engine-devel(a)ovirt.org
>>>>>>> Sent: Thursday, June 27, 2013 10:12:33 AM
>>>>>>> Subject: [Engine-devel] Sorting in tabs
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hello everyone (UI peeps in particular),
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I've pushed (not yet merged) a patch that would enable
us to keep
>>>>>>> items
>>>>>>> in tabs (main/sub) sorted at all times by setting a
comparator in
>>>>>>> SearchableListModel:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> But tabs includes only 100 records and supports paging , how you
deal
>>>>>> with
>>>>>> that ???
>>>>>
>>>>> if this is in the GUI level, then I assume that the comparator is
>>>>> simply
>>>>> comparing the
>>>>> items within the current page, and not "globally".
>>>>> so the sorting doesn't affect the set of items that is displayed
in the
>>>>> page (it would
>>>>> be the same as before the sorting) - just their order.
>>>>
>>>> Yes, if I understand correctly how the paging works, Einav is correct -
>>>> only the items passed to the UI are sorted.
>>>>
>>>>> also: @Lior - what happens when the search query contains a
"sort by"
>>>>> part?
>>>>> there is a chance that the behaivor would be unexpected in this
case;
>>>>
>>>> Yes, I thought about this case, and it may result in a confusing user
>>>> experience if developers aren't careful. Together with the issue of
>>>> paging, this probably makes this sorting mechanism a better candidate
>>>> for use within subtabs rather than main tabs.
>>>
>>> note that at some point, I think that we would want to introduce paging
>>> also to search-
>>> based sub-tabs - it will be useful especially for sub-tabs that
>>> potentially
>>> display a
>>> large number of results (e.g. Disks sub-tab in Storage main tab).
>>> In addition, at some point, we would want to get rid of the paging UI as
>>> it
>>> is now
>>> (i.e. "next"/"prev" buttons at the top panel) and move
to paging
>>> triggered
>>> by scroll
>>> (i.e. have a very long grid, dynamically loaded as you continue to scroll
>>> -
>>> similar
>>> to the behavior of some e-mail web-clients, for example). In this case,
>>> sorting on
>>> the client side will make no sense at all (i.e. from the user
>>> perspective,
>>> only a
>>> portion of a very large grid will be sorted, the other portions won't
>>> be).
>>>
>>> So for now - yes, I think it makes sense to introduce your mechanism to
>>> all
>>> sub-tabs,
>>> however in the long-term - we would probably want the search-based
>>> sub-tabs
>>> (which
>>> will support paging) to move to search-based sorting, rather than
>>> GUI-based-sorting.
>>
>> Sounds good to me. Let me just re-iterate that it is not mandatory to
>> set a comparator, so in technical terms it's not even necessary to
>> introduce it at once to all sub-tabs, if they're already sorting their
>> items some other way. It could happen gradually, and only if developers
>> find it more convenient. In either case, dropping the GUI sorting once
>> search-based sorting is implemented shouldn't be difficult.
>>
>>> BTW (maybe the other GUI maintainers can help me with that one) - what
>>> about sub-tabs
>>> that are not search-based (i.e. display results from a "regular"
query or
>>> even from a
>>> field within the selected item in the main grid, e.g. Applications in VM)
>>> -
>>> are these
>>> managed via SearchableListModel as well? since the comparator mechanism
>>> *is* relevant
>>> for them.
>>
>> As far as I've seen, some are managed via SearchableListModel and some
>> aren't. Those that aren't are those that display non-trivial behaviour
>> upon receipt of the items to display (setItems() method) - often this
>> non-trivial behaviour is exactly sorting :) And if it's doing its job,
>> then there's no necessity to change it either. But anyway, I don't know
>> all of them, so I'd also love to hear GUI maintainers.
>>
>>> Also: Worth mentioning "Bug 893999 - webadmin: please allow column
>>> sorting", which
>>> requests to enable sorting when clicking on a grid-column header; when
>>> implementing
>>> column-sorting, probably worth attaching your mechanism to it somehow
>>> (i.e.
>>> clicking on
>>> a column header should set the relevant comparator in the relevant
>>> SearchableListModel).
>>
>> I didn't want to say it, because if we upgrade to a newer version of GWT
>> then we could probably use their table column sorting. But this
>> mechanism could allow us to achieve this without upgrading, and it was
>> definitely sitting in the back of my head when I implemented it. All
>> that's needed is, as you said, to listen to table header clicks in the
>> view, and then appropriately set the comparator in the model.
>>
>
> [Vojtech/GUI-maintainers - your input would be appreciated here]
>
> we are actually planning on upgrading the GWT version *really* soon (to GWT
> 2.5),
> so my question is: should we wait until the new GWT is introduced, and
> implement
> client-sorting based on the GWT-grid-widget built-in mechanism (assuming
> there is
> one)?
> also, not sure if it is better to utilize the widget default-built-in
> sorting mechanism
> (which doesn't manipulate the uicommon model data at all), or if it is
> better to utilize
> your comparator mechanism, which manipulates the uicommon model data, and
> the GUI-widget
> just reflects this data at any given time.
> thoughts?
I'll just give my two cents concerning this and then let others have the
stage: I don't think it really matters.
Manipulating the models directly is supposedly more portable in case we
ever move away from GWT, but we'd still have the pain of adding new
listeners to the new framework's table headers which could be just as
bad as using its sorting mechanism.
Graphically, the UI might look tighter if we use GWT's mechanism.
However, we could probably mimic everything using GWT's graphics (once
we upgrade) even if we perform the actual sorting using the tab model
and not their mechanism.
My gut feeling actually says to use GWT's built-in mechanism, mainly
because it will force us to put all sorting logic in the same place and
to always use the same sorting mechanism (whereas currently the sorting
logic is scattered and works differently in different places, even if we
use this tab mechanism other widgets will differ). But it shouldn't stop
us from setting a comparator for a tab where convenient.
[again, GUI maintainers - your input would be appreciated]
Thanks, Lior. Need to keep in mind several things:
- we are now talking only about client-sorting, which generally we would like
to apply only to grids that display none-"pagable"-results; for grids that would
display pagable-results, we would want to use search-based (i.e. server) sorting.
[so the sorting logic across the application would be somewhat-scattered anyway].
- I think that if we are choosing to utilize GWT's built-in mechanism, then using
a comparator would makes sense in case you want your results to be initially displayed
in a specific order that would not be obtainable using the column-header sorting.
e.g. (dumb example, for demonstration only) if you would want your VMs to be displayed
by default sorted alphabetically according to the VM's description (and keep in mind
that description is NOT one of the columns in the VMs grid), then you would probably
want to do that via the comparator.
Or (perhaps a better example), if you would want your Templates to be ordered by default
in a way that "Blank" would appear first, and the rest would appear sorted
alphabetically
by name, utilizing the comparator can be a good idea.
[After the initial load of the grid, if the user chooses to sort by name, he can click on
the "Name" column header, which will sort the Templates alphabetically
"regularly" (i.e.
not taking "Blank" into special consideration)]
But - if, by default, we would want, for example, to sort VMs alphabetically by name,
I think that we should imitate a mouse-click on the "Name" column-header, rather
than
utilize a comparator for that (the exact same result shouldn't be achieved by two
different
implementations).
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> I believe that the correct thing to do is to "attach" the
GUI sorting
>>>>> mechanism
>>>>> to the one in the search mechanism.
>>>>>
>>>>> thoughts?
>>>>
>>>> This can be done, however I'm not sure there's much utility in
it. Main
>>>> tabs are always sorted according to some default ordering even if one
>>>> was not entered in the search panel, and this sorting is also performed
>>>> consistently with respect to paging. So maybe the right thing to do
>>>> would be to just "block" the GUI sorting mechanism for main
tabs (i.e.
>>>> override the setter method and make it no-op)?
>>>
>>> yes, and related to what I mentioned above - at some point in the future,
>>> we'd might want
>>> to block it for search-based sub-tabs as well.
>>>
>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
http://gerrit.ovirt.org/#/c/15846/
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> If a comparator isn't set, then everything should behave
as before.
>>>>>>> If
>>>>>>> a
>>>>>>> comparator is set, then from that moment on the tab items
will be
>>>>>>> kept
>>>>>>> in a SortedSet, so that even if an item is added in a way
that
>>>>>>> doesn't
>>>>>>> trigger an event (e.g. getItems().add()) the items will be
kept
>>>>>>> sorted
>>>>>>> according to the given comparator. If the comparator is set
to null,
>>>>>>> from that moment on the tab should revert to its old
behaviour.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> You're most welcome to have a look and let me know if
this might
>>>>>>> break
>>>>>>> something (remember though that it's not obligatory to
set a
>>>>>>> comparator,
>>>>>>> so only possible breakage should be in generic flows).
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Feel free to use it once it's merged; along with
SortedListModel,
>>>>>>> this
>>>>>>> should make sorting less painful. Just keep in mind that
once you set
>>>>>>> a
>>>>>>> comparator, you can't cast getItems() to a List. This
shouldn't be a
>>>>>>> problem in general, as mostly it's as useful (and
probably more
>>>>>>> correct)
>>>>>>> to cast to a Collection.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Lior.
>>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>>> Engine-devel mailing list
>>>>>>> Engine-devel(a)ovirt.org
>>>>>>>
http://lists.ovirt.org/mailman/listinfo/engine-devel
>>>>>>>
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>>>>
>>