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Ben Combee edited this page Feb 21, 2013 · 6 revisions

Menus

onyx.Menu

onyx.Menu is a subkind of onyx.Popup that displays a list of onyx.MenuItem objects and looks like a popup menu. It is meant to be used in conjunction with an onyx.MenuDecorator. The decorator couples the menu with an activating control, which may be a button or any other control with an onActivate event. When the control is activated, the menu shows itself in the correct position relative to the activator.

{kind: "onyx.MenuDecorator", onSelect: "itemSelected", components: [
    {content: "Show menu"},
    {kind: "onyx.Menu", components: [
        {content: "one", value: "1"},
        {content: "two", value: "2"},
        {classes: "onyx-menu-divider"},
        {content: "three", value: "3"},
    ]}
]}

onyx.Menu hidden

onyx.Menu shown

Typically, you'll want to handle the onSelect event that a menu item fires when selected. This event contains a reference to the originating menu item (inEvent.originator).

If the menu item is a simple instance of onyx.MenuItem (as in our example), you may use inEvent.originator in your handler method to obtain the values of relevant properties such as content or value:

itemSelected: function(inSender, inEvent) {
    if (inEvent.originator.content) {
        itemContent = inEvent.originator.content;
        // do something with itemContent
        ...
    }
}

If you've created a menu in which each menu item is a kind with subcomponents (e.g., an onyx.IconButton plus an onyx.MenuItem), you'll need to perform the extra step of identifying the originating menu item before you can retrieve property values from it. For instance, if each menu item looks like this...

{components: [
    {kind: "onyx.IconButton", src: "assets/<someIcon>.png"},
    {content: "<someContent>", value: "{someValue}"}
]}

...then your handler method might look like this:

itemSelected: function(inSender, inEvent) {
    if (inEvent.selected) {
        itemContent = inEvent.selected.controlAtIndex(1).content;
        itemValue = inEvent.selected.controlAtIndex(1).value;
        // do something with itemContent and/or itemValue
        ...
    }
}

A menu may be "floated" by setting its floating property to true. When a menu is not floating (the default), it will scroll along with the activating control, but may be obscured by surrounding content with a higher z-index. When floating, the menu will never be obscured, but it will not scroll along with the activating control.

In addition, by default, menus are placed in a scroller and will attempt to size the scroller so that the full menu can be used at any screen height. Set the scrolling property to false during instantiation to use a static menu instead.

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