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YUI Library Examples: TreeView Control: Treeview Node Selection and Checkbox Example

TreeView Control: Treeview Node Selection and Checkbox Example

In this simple example you can see how to do node selection in the TreeView Control.

Tree with highlight propagation and 'checkbox' skin


Tree with single node highlighting and simple skin

Tri-State Checkbox Example

Nodes of the TreeView Control can be highlighted in response to a user action or via code. That highlighting can affect a single node at a time or multiple nodes and it can propagate up or down the tree. In this example we show two trees built at random with different node highlighting settings.

We begin by defining the containers that will hold the trees. The built-in stylesheet allows for two styles of highlighting, the first one, selected via the className ygtv-checkbox, will add a tri-state checkbox in between the toggle icon and the label, the second, selected via the className ygtv-highlight, will change the background of highlighted nodes. If neither of those classes are selected, the highlighting will still work, but the user won't notice since there will be no visual clues. We also add a button to show how highlighted (selected) nodes can be found.

We create the first TreeView and render it. Function makeBranch recursively builds a random branch of TextNodes. Highlighting is enabled by default, nodes can be highlighted via code, but to respond to user events we need to attach the supplied listener onEventToggleHighlight to the event we want to respond to. We also want the highlighting to propagate both up and down.

The checkbox is tri-state because when the highlighting propagates up, the parent node into which it propagates might not have all its child nodes highlighted, so the checkbox has a partially checked state.

We can easily find out which nodes have been highlighted by searching the tree by property highlighState which will be 0 for not-highlighted, 1 for highlighted and 2 for a node that has some children highlighted.

For tree2 we have set property singleNodeHighlight to true so that by selecting one node, the currently highlighted node, if any, will be un-highlighted. The change in appearance is due to the highlighting 'skin' selected.

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