@AemComponent is your entry point to creating component authoring interfaces, such as a Dialog, a Design dialog, or an In-place editing config. When added to a Java class, this annotation must contain generic properties of the component such as title, description, etc.
Additionally, @AemComponent
can contain references to other Java classes that can be referred to as “views”. If, for instance, you need editConfig, you can add the @EditConfig
to the Java class where the @AemComponent
annotation is already present. You can also add @EditConfig
to another Java class and put a reference to that class in the views collection of @AemComponent
.
Take note that you need either to put an annotation such as @Dialog
or @EditConfig
in the same Java class as @AemComponent
or add it to another class and then add the class reference to the views collection. You don't need to do both.
See the code snippet below, which displays all currently supported @AemComponent
properties:
@AemComponent(
path = "content/my-component",
title = "My AEM Component",
description = "test component",
componentGroup = "My Component Group",
resourceSuperType = "resource/super/type",
disableTargeting = true,
views = {
DesignDialogView.class,
DialogView.class,
HtmlTagView.class,
ChildEditConfigView.class,
EditConfig.class
}
)
public class ComplexComponentHolder {/* ... */}
Pay attention to the path property. This can be set in two ways. First is the "relative" path that will be resolved from the point specified by the plugin's componentsPathBase setting. This is a common way. Otherwise, you can store an "absolute" path that will be resolved from the root of the package. The absolute path starts with jcr_root folder or any folder that goes immediately under jcr_root. Usually, it would be something like /apps/vendor/components/myComponent.
By default, the plugin searches for the directory specified in path and triggers an exception if unable to find one. This is justified because a non-existing folder usually means an invalid component path (a typo in path, or some misconfiguration).
However, there is a way to make the plugin create a folder in the package when missing. This can be useful for single-use components (such as Exadel Toolbox Lists' items), or components that do not need a specific HTML or JSP file. In such a case add writeMode = WriteMode.CREATE
to your @AemComponent
.
@Dialog
is used for defining component's Touch UI dialog by creating and populating <cq:dialog> node.
@Dialog(
title = "My AEM Dialog",
helpPath = "https://www.google.com/search?q=my+aem+component",
width = 800,
height = 600,
extraClientlibs = "cq.common.wcm",
forceIgnoreFreshness = true
)
public class MyComponentDialog {/* ... */}
If you specify title in @Dialog
, it will override the title specified in @AemComponent. Skip this if you need to have the same title rendered for the component itself and for the dialog.
Pay attention to the forceIgnoreFreshness option. When set to true, it forces the entire dialog to ignore freshness of the Granite UI form beside the dialog. This will allow any component that resides within the dialog to display its default value (if specified) regardless of whether the underlying resource is being created anew (a "fresh" one) or just being edited.
Most Granite UI components don't manage default values when editing a "non-fresh" resource. Some offer their own implementation of forceIgnoreFreshness (most notably, the Select component). However, specifying forceIgnoreFreshness at the @Dialog
level makes the rest behave in the way the Select does.
@DesignDialog
is used for defining component's Touch UI dialog by creating and populating <cq:design_dialog> node.
@DesignDialog(
title = "My AEM Component",
width = 800,
height = 600
)
public class DesignDialogView {/* ... */}
If you specify title in @DesignDialog
, it will override the title specified in @AemComponent
. Skip this if you need to have the same title rendered for the component itself and for the design dialog.
Both the Touch UI dialog and design dialog can have either a relative simple or a complex structure. This is why they can either have a plain "all in the same screen" display or be organized with use of nested sections, or containers.
In the first case, no specific setup is required. A dialog is automatically assigned the "fixed column" style.
Otherwise, a dialog can be rendered in one or more tabs, or be organized as an accordion with one or more panels. To achieve this, you need to put the @Tabs
or @Accordion
annotation respectively beside your @Dialog
/@DesignDialog
. See Laying out your dialog for details.
If you wish to engage Touch UI dialog features like listeners or in-place editing (those living in <cq:editConfig> node and, accordingly, _cq_editConfig.xml file), add an @EditConfig
annotation to your Java class (same as above, you can as well add the annotation to a separate class and then put the reference to this class into @AemComponent's views property).
@EditConfig facilitates setting of the following properties and features:
- Actions
- Empty text
- Inherit
- Dialog layout
- Drop targets
- Form parameters
- In-place editing
- Listeners
Here is a basic sample of an @EditConfig
with several of the parameters specified:
@EditConfig(
emptyText = "Input here",
listeners = {
@Listener(
event = ListenerConstants.EVENT_AFTER_INSERT,
action = ListenerConstants.ACTION_REFRESH_PAGE
),
@Listener(
event = ListenerConstants.EVENT_AFTER_DELETE,
action = ListenerConstants.ACTION_REFRESH_PAGE
)
},
dropTargets = {
@DropTargetConfig(
nodeName = "logo",
accept = "image/.*",
groups = "media",
propertyName = "logo/fileReference"
),
@DropTargetConfig(
nodeName = "background",
accept = "image/.*",
groups = "media",
propertyName = "background/fileReference"
)
},
formParameters = {
@FormParameter(name = "param1", value = "value1"),
@FormParameter(name = "param2", value = "value2")
}
)
public class ImageEditor {/* ... */}
To specify in-place editing configurations for your component, populate the inplaceEditing property of @EditConfig
annotation as follows:
@EditConfig(
inplaceEditing = @InplaceEditingConfig(
type = EditorType.TEXT,
editElementQuery = ".editable-header",
name = "header",
propertyName = "header"
)
)
public class CustomPropertiesDialog {
@DialogField
@TextField
String header;
}
Note that if you use type = EditorType.PLAINTEXT
, there is an additional required textPropertyName value. If you do not specify a value, the same propertyName string will be used.
It’s also possible to create multiple in-place editors as in the following snippet
@Dialog(name = "componentName")
@EditConfig(
inplaceEditing = {
@InplaceEditingConfig(
type = EditorType.PLAINTEXT,
editElementQuery = ".editable-headline",
name = "headline",
propertyName = "headline"
),
@InplaceEditingConfig(
type = "CustomType",
editElementQuery = ".editable-description",
name = "description",
propertyName = "description"
)
}
)
public class CustomPropertiesDialog {/* ... */}
With an in-place configuration of type = EditorType.TEXT
, a richTextConfig can be specified with syntax equivalent to that of a @RichTextEditor annotation.
Here is a very basic example of a richTextConfig for an in-place editor
@InplaceEditingConfig (
type = EditorType.TEXT,
richTextConfig = @RichTextEditor(
features = {
RteFeatures.UNDO_UNDO,
RteFeatures.UNDO_REDO,
RteFeatures.Popovers.MISCTOOLS,
RteFeatures.Panels.TABLE,
RteFeatures.FULLSCREEN_TOGGLE
},
icons = @IconMapping(command = "#misctools", icon = "fileCode"),
htmlPasteRules = @HtmlPasteRules(
allowBold = false,
allowImages = false,
allowLists = AllowElement.REPLACE_WITH_PARAGRAPHS,
allowTables = AllowElement.REPLACE_WITH_PARAGRAPHS
)
)
)
class DialogSample {/* ... */}
Even more simply, you can specify the richText field to "extend" RTE configuration for a Touch UI dialog elsewhere in your project:
@InplaceEditingConfig (
type = EditorType.TEXT,
richText = @Extends(value = HelloWorld.class, field = "myRteAnnotatedField"),
richTextConfig = @RichTextEditor(/* ... */)
)
From the above snippet, you can see that richText and richTextConfig work together fine. A configuration inherited via richText can be altered by whatever properties that are specified in richTextConfig.
If you use both in the same @InplaceEditingConfig
, plain values, such as strings and numbers, specified for the @Extends
-ed field are overwritten by their correlates from richTextConfig.
On the other hand, array-typed values (such as features, specialCharacters, formats, etc.) are actually merged. So you can design a fairly basic set of features, styles, and formats to store in a field somewhere in your project and then implement several richTextConfig-s with more comprehensive feature sets.
In addition to <cq:editConfig> itself, Adobe Granite makes it possible to define some in-place editing features for the current component’s children. This is done via the <cq:childEditConfig> with the same general structure as <cq:editConfig>.
It facilitates the setting of the following properties and features:
- Actions
- Drop targets
- Listeners
Usage:
@ChildEditConfig(
actions = {"edit", "copymove"}
)
public class Dialog {
@DialogField
@TextField
String field1;
}
To create a specific decoration tag for your widget, you need to mark your Java class with @HtmlTag
and put this class to the Component's views property. Then the <cq:htmlTag> node will be added to your component's nodeset.
@HtmlTag(
className = "my-class",
tagName = "span"
)
public class MyComponentDialog {/* ... */}
You can use an approach similar to the one described above for creating a page properties dialog.
Specify an absolute path to the JCR node that refers to the page in your @AemComponent
like @AemComponent(path = "/apps/my/components/pages/page"}
, or else provide a relative path. Even if your componentsPathBase points to an AEM components' root, you can traverse up and to the "pages" sibling node like this: @AemComponent(path = "../pages/page"}
.
Page properties dialogs are most often composed of tabs. It is a common practice for page properties dialogs to include an existing tab resource instead of enumerating components one by one. This is because tabs are often reused and overlayed across the page hierarchy. You can include an existing tab as follows:
@AemComponent(
path = "../pages/my-page",
resourceSuperType = "my/components/pages/page",
title = "Page properties"
)
@Dialog
@Tabs(@Tab(title = "Basic"))
public class DummyComponent {
@Include(path = "my/components/pages/my-page/tabs/tabMetadata")
@Place("Basic")
private String basicTabHolder;
}
Else, you can add components to the tab as usual. Note that usually in a Page properties dialog tab components are wrapped in an additional column so that they get centered on the screen and do not span the whole of the screen width. This can be achieved through a nested column.
@AemComponent(
path = "../pages/my-page",
resourceSuperType = "my/components/pages/page",
title = "Page properties"
)
@Dialog
@Tabs(@Tab(title = "Basic"))
public class DummyComponent {
// The title is not actually rendered, so you may specify any meaningful string
@FixedColumns(@Column(title = "Tab column"))
@Place("Basic")
private int tabHolder; // Type of the field does not matter as well
@DialogField(label = "Enter text")
@TextField
@Place("Tab column")
private String text;
@DialogField(label = "Enter description")
@TextField
@Place("Tab column")
private String description;
}
Else you can use a nested class annotated with FixedColumns
for that purpose.