Excellent and thorough answer. Looks like the sample code covers the bases too. This should get me going. Many Thanks! Steve Orr Doing High Tech in Big Sky Country -----Original Message----- From: quixote-users-bounces@mems-exchange.org [mailto:quixote-users-bounces@mems-exchange.org] On Behalf Of David Binger Sent: Friday, July 15, 2005 11:33 AM To: Quixote Subject: Re: [Quixote-users] Best Practices On Jul 15, 2005, at 12:06 PM, Orr, Steve wrote: > I like what I see. But what I need is some more advanced sample code. > Are there any examples of how to use Javascript with Quixote? I know > Quixote is meant to be lean and a lot of our "framework" will need to > stem from our own original engineering efforts. Can someone point > me to > some more robust sample code or give me some guidelines in this > effort?\ > The dulcinea package includes a lot of example-type code (but no guidelines). It includes some widgets that use javascript. http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/dulcinea/ > > Here's a specific how-to request: > We deal with a LOT of tabular database result sets and I'm thinking > the > best way to display this is with HTML tables. I've started development > of a somewhat generic table template object for displaying tabular > data. > Now I need to let the user click on the column header to resort the > data. Most of the time this will require a requerying of the database > Dulcinea includes a table class that we use for this purpose. It supports client-side and server side sorting by column, and can also generate the table in csv format. It uses javascript for client side sorting and and a query string for the server side, but the server-side render could easily be changed. If you don't want a query string, you could use ordinary path component to specify the sort column, or the form-based method you described. _______________________________________________ Quixote-users mailing list Quixote-users@mems-exchange.org http://mail.mems-exchange.org/mailman/listinfo/quixote-users