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Extjs4 Css美工有关

2012-11-23 
Extjs4 Css美工相关转: http://www.sencha.com/learn/theming/#!/guide/theming-section-2??This Guide is

Extjs4 Css美工相关

转: http://www.sencha.com/learn/theming/#!/guide/theming-section-2

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This Guide is most relevant to Ext JS, 4.x.

Contents

    A Brief Introduction to SASS & Compass Requirements Directory Structure Compiling your CSS Changing global SASS variables View the Results Component UIs Supporting Legacy Browsers FAQ

Ext JS 4 has a brand new theming system to customize the look of your application while still supporting all browsers.

A Brief Introduction to SASS & Compass

SASS is a pre-processor which adds new syntax to CSS allowing for things like variables, mixins, nesting, and math/color functions. For example, in SASS we can write:

?

$blue: #3bbfce;$margin: 16px;?.content-navigation {    border-color: $blue;    color: darken($blue, 9%);}?.border {    padding: $margin / 2;    margin: $margin / 2;    border-color: $blue;}

And it will compile to:

.content-navigation {    border-color: #3bbfce;    color: #2b9eab;}?.border {    padding: 8px;    margin: 8px;    border-color: #3bbfce;}

To see the wide variety of other features available in SASS, please see http://sass-lang.com/. Compass extends SASS by adding a variety of CSS3 mixins and providing the extension system that Ext JS leverages. With Compass, one can include rules like:

$boxheight: 10em;?.mybox {    @include border-radius($boxheight/4);}

Which compiles into:

.mybox {    -webkit-border-radius: 2.5em;    -moz-border-radius: 2.5em;    -o-border-radius: 2.5em;    -ms-border-radius: 2.5em;    -khtml-border-radius: 2.5em;    border-radius: 2.5em;}

You can learn more about the pre-included mixins with Compass and the other tools it provides here: http://compass-style.org/docs/.

RequirementsRubyMac OSX

XCode installs Ruby and all necessary dependencies to your Mac when installed.

Xcode can be found on the Apple Developer Website: http://developer.apple.com/xcode/

Windows

Visit http://rubyinstaller.org/ and download the latest packaged version of Ruby (1.9.2 at the time of writing)

Compass/SASS gemMac OSX

In /Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app, run the following code (you will be asked for your password):

sudo gem install compass

You can verify you have Compass and Sass installed by running the following in Terminal.app:

compass -v?sass -v

At the time of writing, the latest version of Compass is 0.11.1 (Antares). The latest version of Sass is 3.1.1 (Brainy Betty)

Windows

Select Start Command Prompt with Ruby from the new Start Menu option.

Type the following:

gem install compass

You can verify you have Compass and Sass installed by running the following in Terminal.app:

compass -vsass -v

At the time of writing, the latest version of Compass is 0.11.1 (Antares). The latest version of Sass is 3.1.1 (Brainy Betty)

Directory Structure

The Ext JS SDK comes with a template which can be used as a base for your new theme. If you followed the Getting Started guide, you should have a directory for your application with a subfolder extjs containing the Ext JS SDK. It should look something like this:

appname/appname/extjs/appname/app.jsappname/index.html

Copy the template resources folder from appname/extjs/resources/themes/templates/resource to your root application folder:

appname/appname/resources/appname/resources/css/appname/resources/sass/appname/resources/sass/config.rbappname/resources/sass/my-ext-theme.sass

You will also need to copy the images from appname/extjs/resources/themes/images/default to appname/resources/images.

Ensure the path to your Ext JS folder is correct in appname/resources/sass/config.rb:

# $ext_path: This should be the path of the Ext JS SDK relative to this file$ext_path = "../../extjs"

Due to a bug in Ext JS 4.0.2a you will also need to edit line 62 of appname/extjs/resources/themes/lib/utils.rb from this:

images_path = File.join($ext_path, 'resources', 'themes', 'images', theme)

to this:

images_path = relative_path

This ensures images will be served from appname/resources/images rather than appname/extjs/resources/images

Compiling your CSS

Compiling your CSS is a simple process using Compass.

First, change to your sass directory in appname/resources/sass, then run the following command in Terminal.app on Mac OSX or Command Prompt on Windows:

> compass compile

This should output the following:

> create ../css/my-ext-theme.css

Your minified css file should now be in appname/resources/css/my-ext-theme.css.

Changing global SASS variables

The Ext JS theming system comes with global SASS variables which you can use to change the look of your application with a few lines of code.

These SASS variables can be added to your appname/resources/sass/my-ext-theme.scss file, but they must be inserted before the call to @import 'ext4/default/all'. You can see an example commented out at the top of your my-ext-theme.scss file:

// Insert your custom variables here.// $base-color: #aa0000;

Try uncommenting this line and changing the base-color to something else, perhaps the green #a1c148.

Now regenerate your theme by navigating to appname/resources/sass and running compass compile

Available Variables

Navigate to appname/extjs/resources/themes/stylesheets/ext4/default/variables directory. This directory contains all defined variables for each component in Ext JS 4.

The naming convention for variables follows CSS property names, prepends by the component name. For example:

Panel border radius

CSS Property: border-radius Variable: $panel-border-radius

Panel body background color

CSS Property: background-color Variable: $panel-body-background-color

Toolbar background color

CSS Property: background-color Variable: $toolbar-background-color

You can copy any of these variables and add them to your appname/resources/sass/my-ext-theme.scss file before the @import 'ext4/default/all' line.

View the Results

To view your new theme, lets overwrite app.js with the Theme example from the main SDK. This example shows most Ext JS components on a single page. Copy appname/extjs/examples/themes/themes.js to appname/app.js.

Update appname/index.html to the following:

<html><head>    <title>Ext Theme</title>?    <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="resources/css/my-ext-theme.css">    <script type="text/javascript" src="extjs/ext-debug.js"></script>    <script type="text/javascript" src="app.js"></script></head><body></body></html>

Now open index.html in your browser and you should see your new theme in action. Try updating the base color in my-ext-theme.sass to something else, recompile your sass, and refresh your browser to see the change. Also try experimenting with other sass variables.

Component UIs

Every component in the Ext JS framework has a ui configuration (which defaults to default). This property can be changed to allow components in your application to have different styles.

The ui of any component can be changed at any time, even after render, by using the setUI method. An example of this can be found in examples/panel/bubble-panel.html.

Creating new Ext JS UIs

Some Ext JS components have SASS @mixin's which allow you to quickly generate new UIs. These include: Ext.panel.Panel, Ext.button.Button, Ext.Toolbar and Ext.window.Window.

Creating these new UIs is simple. Simply call the associated @mixin (found in the documentation) for the component you want to create a new UI for.

Lets look at the Panel @mixin as an example (which can be found in examples/panel/bubble-panel/sass/bubble-panel.scss):

@include extjs-panel-ui(    'bubble',?    $ui-header-font-size: 12px,    $ui-header-font-weight: bold,    $ui-header-color: #0D2A59,    $ui-header-background-color: #fff,    $ui-header-background-gradient: null,?    $ui-border-color: #fff,    $ui-border-radius: 4px,    $ui-body-background-color: #fff,    $ui-body-font-size: 14px);

The above code will create a new ui for any Ext.panel.Panel component, which you can then use in your application by specifying the ui configuration:

Ext.create('widget.panel', {    ui: 'bubble',    width: 300,    height: 300,    title: 'Panel with a bubble UI!'});
Supporting Legacy Browsers

In most cases when creating new UI's, you will want to include background gradients or rounded corners. Unfortunately legacy browsers do not support the corresponding CSS3 properties, so we must use images instead.

With Ext JS 4, we have included a Slicing tool which does the hard work for you. Simply pass it a manifest file of your new UI's (if you have created any) and run the tool from the command line.

How it works

The slicing tool creates a new browser instance, which loads Ext JS and a specified CSS file. Once loaded, it parses a JavaScript file which includes every Ext JS component that needs styling (panel, window, toolbar, etc.). It then analyzes each of those components and determines the size and location of each image that needs to be sliced. It then slices each of the images, sprites them together and saves them in the location defined in the manifest.

The slicer too itself can be run from the command line and is installed as part of the SDK Tools package. It can be run by calling sencha slice theme. Example usage (assuming you are in your application root directory):

sencha slice theme -d extjs -c resources/css/my-ext-theme.css -o resources/images -v

It accepts several arguments:

--css[=]value, -c[=]value

The path to your theme's complete CSS file, e.g., ext-all-access.css. Uses the default Ext JS 4 theme CSS if not provided.

--ext-dir[=]value, -d[=]value (required)

The path to the root of your Ext JS 4 SDK directory.

--manifest[=]value, -m[=]value

The path to your Theme Generator JSON manifest file, e.g., manifest.json. Uses the default packaged manifest if not provided.

--output-dir[=]value, -o[=]value

The destination path to save all generated theme images. This should be inside the resources/themes/images/<themename>/ directory. Defaults to the current working directory.

--verbose, -v

Display a message for every image that is generated.

Usage

    Compile your CSS

    You must ensure your SASS theme file has been compiled as this is used for the slicer. Passing no CSS file would result in the slicer to revert to the default ext-all.css file, which would be pointless in most cases.

    Creating your manifest file (optional)

    The manifest file is a simple JavaScript file which tells the Slicing tool which custom UI's you would like to slice. This step is only necessary when you have created new UI's.

    Let's look at the bubble panel example again:

    Ext.onReady(function() {    Ext.manifest = {        widgets: [            {                xtype: 'widget.header',                ui   : 'bubble'            },            {                xtype: 'widget.panel',                ui   : 'bubble'            }        ]    };});

    As you can see, you define an Object called Ext.manifest and give it an Array property called widgets. In this Array you should insert an object containing the xtype and ui of the component you want to generate the images for.

    It is important that the Ext.manifest Object is defined inside the Ext.onReady method.

    Generating your images

    Now all that is left is to run the command, including the arguments to the Ext JS SDK folder, your theme CSS file and the output directory of the sliced images.

    sencha slice theme -d extjs -c resources/css/my-ext-theme.css -o resources/images -v
FAQ

I am getting a 'error resources/sass/my-ext-theme.scss (Line 8: File to import not found or unreadable: ext4/default/all)' error when I compile?

This is because Compass cannot file the Ext JS 4 theme files. Ensure the $ext_path in the sass/config.rb file is correct.

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