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ReStructuredText
443 lines
16 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _module:
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.. queue:: module/series
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Building a Web module
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=====================
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There is no significant distinction between a Web module and
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a regular module, the web part is mostly additional data and code
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inside a regular module. This allows providing more seamless
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features by integrating your module deeper into the web client.
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A Basic Module
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--------------
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A very basic OpenERP module structure will be our starting point:
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.. code-block:: text
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web_example
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├── __init__.py
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└── __manifest__.py
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.. patch::
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This is a sufficient minimal declaration of a valid module.
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Web Declaration
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---------------
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There is no such thing as a "web module" declaration. An OpenERP
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module is automatically recognized as "web-enabled" if it contains a
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``static`` directory at its root, so:
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.. code-block:: text
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web_example
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├── __init__.py
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├── __manifest__.py
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└── static
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is the extent of it. You should also change the dependency to list
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``web``:
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.. patch::
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.. note::
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This does not matter in normal operation so you may not realize
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it's wrong (the web module does the loading of everything else, so
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it can only be loaded), but when e.g. testing the loading process
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is slightly different than normal, and incorrect dependency may
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lead to broken code.
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This makes the "web" discovery system consider the module as having a
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"web part", and check if it has web controllers to mount or javascript
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files to load. The content of the ``static/`` folder is also
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automatically made available to web browser at the URL
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``$module-name/static/$file-path``. This is sufficient to provide
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pictures (of cats, usually) through your module. However there are
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still a few more steps to running javascript code.
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Getting Things Done
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-------------------
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The first one is to add javascript code. It's customary to put it in
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``static/src/js``, to have room for e.g. other file types, or
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third-party libraries.
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.. patch::
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The client won't load any file unless specified, thus the new file
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should be listed in the module's manifest file, under a new key ``js``
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(a list of file names, or glob patterns):
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.. patch::
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At this point, if the module is installed and the client reloaded the
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message should appear in your browser's development console.
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.. note::
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Because the manifest file has been edited, you will have to
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restart the OpenERP server itself for it to be taken in account.
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You may also want to open your browser's console *before*
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reloading, depending on the browser messages printed while the
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console is closed may not work or may not appear after opening it.
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.. note::
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If the message does not appear, try cleaning your browser's caches
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and ensure the file is correctly loaded from the server logs or
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the "resources" tab of your browser's developers tools.
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At this point the code runs, but it runs only once when the module is
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initialized, and it can't get access to the various APIs of the web
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client (such as making RPC requests to the server). This is done by
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providing a `javascript module`_:
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.. patch::
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If you reload the client, you'll see a message in the console exactly
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as previously. The differences, though invisible at this point, are:
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* All javascript files specified in the manifest (only this one so
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far) have been fully loaded
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* An instance of the web client and a namespace inside that instance
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(with the same name as the module) have been created and are
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available for use
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The latter point is what the ``instance`` parameter to the function
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provides: an instance of the OpenERP Web client, with the contents of
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all the new module's dependencies loaded in and initialized. These are
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the entry points to the web client's APIs.
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To demonstrate, let's build a simple :doc:`client action
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<client_action>`: a stopwatch
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First, the action declaration:
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.. patch::
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then set up the :doc:`client action hook <client_action>` to register
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a function (for now):
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.. patch::
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Updating the module (in order to load the XML description) and
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re-starting the server should display a new menu *Example Client
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Action* at the top-level. Opening said menu will make the message
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appear, as usual, in the browser's console.
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Paint it black
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--------------
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The next step is to take control of the page itself, rather than just
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print little messages in the console. This we can do by replacing our
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client action function by a :doc:`widget`. Our widget will simply use
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its :js:func:`~openerp.web.Widget.start` to add some content to its
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DOM:
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.. patch::
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after reloading the client (to update the javascript file), instead of
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printing to the console the menu item clears the whole screen and
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displays the specified message in the page.
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Since we've added a class on the widget's :ref:`DOM root
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<widget-dom_root>` we can now see how to add a stylesheet to a module:
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first create the stylesheet file:
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.. patch::
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then add a reference to the stylesheet in the module's manifest (which
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will require restarting the OpenERP Server to see the changes, as
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usual):
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.. patch::
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the text displayed by the menu item should now be huge, and
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white-on-black (instead of small and black-on-white). From there on,
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the world's your canvas.
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.. note::
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Prefixing CSS rules with both ``.openerp`` (to ensure the rule
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will apply only within the confines of the OpenERP Web client) and
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a class at the root of your own hierarchy of widgets is strongly
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recommended to avoid "leaking" styles in case the code is running
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embedded in an other web page, and does not have the whole screen
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to itself.
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So far we haven't built much (any, really) DOM content. It could all
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be done in :js:func:`~openerp.web.Widget.start` but that gets unwieldy
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and hard to maintain fast. It is also very difficult to extend by
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third parties (trying to add or change things in your widgets) unless
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broken up into multiple methods which each perform a little bit of the
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rendering.
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The first way to handle this method is to delegate the content to
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plenty of sub-widgets, which can be individually overridden. An other
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method [#DOM-building]_ is to use `a template
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<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_template>`_ to render a widget's
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DOM.
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OpenERP Web's template language is :doc:`qweb`. Although any
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templating engine can be used (e.g. `mustache
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<http://mustache.github.com/>`_ or `_.template
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<http://underscorejs.org/#template>`_) QWeb has important features
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which other template engines may not provide, and has special
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integration to OpenERP Web widgets.
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Adding a template file is similar to adding a style sheet:
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.. patch::
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The template can then easily be hooked in the widget:
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.. patch::
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And finally the CSS can be altered to style the new (and more complex)
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template-generated DOM, rather than the code-generated one:
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.. patch::
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.. note::
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The last section of the CSS change is an example of "state
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classes": a CSS class (or set of classes) on the root of the
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widget, which is toggled when the state of the widget changes and
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can perform drastic alterations in rendering (usually
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showing/hiding various elements).
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This pattern is both fairly simple (to read and understand) and
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efficient (because most of the hard work is pushed to the
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browser's CSS engine, which is usually highly optimized, and done
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in a single repaint after toggling the class).
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The last step (until the next one) is to add some behavior and make
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our stopwatch watch. First hook some events on the buttons to toggle
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the widget's state:
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.. patch::
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This demonstrates the use of the "events hash" and event delegation to
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declaratively handle events on the widget's DOM. And already changes
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the button displayed in the UI. Then comes some actual logic:
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.. patch::
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* An initializer (the ``init`` method) is introduced to set-up a few
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internal variables: ``_start`` will hold the start of the timer (as
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a javascript Date object), and ``_watch`` will hold a ticker to
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update the interface regularly and display the "current time".
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* ``update_counter`` is in charge of taking the time difference
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between "now" and ``_start``, formatting as ``HH:MM:SS`` and
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displaying the result on screen.
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* ``watch_start`` is augmented to initialize ``_start`` with its value
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and set-up the update of the counter display every 33ms.
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* ``watch_stop`` disables the updater, does a final update of the
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counter display and resets everything.
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* Finally, because javascript Interval and Timeout objects execute
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"outside" the widget, they will keep going even after the widget has
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been destroyed (especially an issue with intervals as they repeat
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indefinitely). So ``_watch`` *must* be cleared when the widget is
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destroyed (then the ``_super`` must be called as well in order to
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perform the "normal" widget cleanup).
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Starting and stopping the watch now works, and correctly tracks time
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since having started the watch, neatly formatted.
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Burning through the skies
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-------------------------
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All work so far has been "local" outside of the original impetus
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provided by the client action: the widget is self-contained and, once
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started, does not communicate with anything outside itself. Not only
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that, but it has no persistence: if the user leaves the stopwatch
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screen (to go and see his inbox, or do some well-deserved accounting,
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for instance) whatever was being timed will be lost.
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To prevent this irremediable loss, we can use OpenERP's support for
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storing data as a model, allowing so that we don't lose our data and
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can later retrieve, query and manipulate it. First let's create a
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basic OpenERP model in which our data will be stored:
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.. patch::
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then let's add saving times to the database every time the stopwatch
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is stopped, using :js:class:`the "high-level" Model API
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<openerp.web.Model.call>`:
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.. patch::
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A look at the "Network" tab of your preferred browser's developer
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tools while playing with the stopwatch will show that the save
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(creation) request is indeed sent (and replied to, even though we're
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ignoring the response at this point).
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These saved data should now be loaded and displayed when first opening
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the action, so the user can see his previously recorded times. This is
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done by overloading the model's ``start`` method: the purpose of
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:js:func:`~openerp.base.Widget.start()` is to perform *asynchronous*
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initialization steps, so the rest of the web client knows to "wait"
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and gets a readiness signal. In this case, it will fetch the data
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recorded previously using the :js:class:`~openerp.web.Query` interface
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and add this data to an ordered list added to the widget's template:
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.. patch::
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And for consistency's sake (so that the display a user leaves is
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pretty much the same as the one he comes back to), newly created
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records should also automatically be added to the list:
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.. patch::
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Note that we're only displaying the record once we know it's been
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saved from the database (the ``create`` call has returned without
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error).
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Mic check, is this working?
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---------------------------
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So far, features have been implemented, code has been worked and
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tentatively tried. However, there is no guarantee they will *keep
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working* as new changes are performed, new features added, …
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The original author (you, dear reader) could keep a notebook with a
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list of workflows to check, to ensure everything keeps working. And
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follow the notebook day after day, every time something is changed in
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the module.
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That gets repetitive after a while. And computers are good at doing
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repetitive stuff, as long as you tell them how to do it.
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So let's add test to the module, so that in the future the computer
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can take care of ensuring what works today keeps working tomorrow.
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.. note::
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Here we're writing tests after having implemented the widget. This
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may or may not work, we may need to alter bits and pieces of code
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to get them in a testable state. An other testing methodology is
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:abbr:`TDD (Test-Driven Development)` where the tests are written
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first, and the code necessary to make these tests pass is written
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afterwards.
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Both methods have their opponents and detractors, advantages and
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inconvenients. Pick the one you prefer.
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The first step of :doc:`testing` is to set up the basic testing
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structure:
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1. Creating a javascript file
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.. patch::
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2. Containing a test section (and a few tests to make sure the tests
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are correctly run)
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.. patch::
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3. Then declaring the test file in the module's manifest
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.. patch::
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4. And finally — after restarting OpenERP — navigating to the test
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runner at ``/web/tests`` and selecting your soon-to-be-tested
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module:
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.. image:: module/testing_0.png
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:align: center
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the testing result do indeed match the test.
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The simplest tests to write are for synchronous pure
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functions. Synchronous means no RPC call or any other such thing
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(e.g. ``setTimeout``), only direct data processing, and pure means no
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side-effect: the function takes some input, manipulates it and yields
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an output.
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In our widget, only ``format_time`` fits the bill: it takes a duration
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(in milliseconds) and returns an ``hours:minutes:second`` formatting
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of it. Let's test it:
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.. patch::
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This series of simple tests passes with no issue. The next easy-ish
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test type is to test basic DOM alterations from provided input, such
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as (for our widget) updating the counter or displaying a record to the
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records list: while it's not pure (it alters the DOM "in-place") it
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has well-delimited side-effects and these side-effects come solely
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from the provided input.
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Because these methods alter the widget's DOM, the widget needs a
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DOM. Looking up :doc:`a widget's lifecycle <widget>`, the widget
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really only gets its DOM when adding it to the document. However a
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side-effect of this is to :js:func:`~openerp.web.Widget.start` it,
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which for us means going to query the user's times.
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We don't have any records to get in our test, and we don't want to
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test the initialization yet! So let's cheat a bit: we can manually
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:js:func:`set a widget's DOM <openerp.web.Widget.setElement>`, let's
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create a basic DOM matching what each method expects then call the
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method:
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.. patch::
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The next group of patches (in terms of setup/complexity) is RPC tests:
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testing components/methods which perform network calls (RPC
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requests). In our module, ``start`` and ``watch_stop`` are in that
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case: ``start`` fetches the user's recorded times and ``watch_stop``
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creates a new record with the current watch.
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By default, tests don't allow RPC requests and will generate an error
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when trying to perform one:
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.. image:: module/testing_1.png
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:align: center
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To allow them, the test case (or the test suite) has to explicitly opt
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into :js:attr:`rpc support <TestOptions.rpc>` by adding the ``rpc:
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'mock'`` option to the test case, and providing its own "rpc
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responses":
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.. patch::
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.. note::
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By defaut, tests cases don't load templates either. We had not
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needed to perform any template rendering before here, so we must
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now enable templates loading via :js:attr:`the corresponding
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option <TestOptions.templates>`.
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Our final test requires altering the module's code: asynchronous tests
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use :doc:`deferred </async>` to know when a test ends and the other
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one can start (otherwise test content will execute non-linearly and
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the assertions of a test will be executed during the next test or
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worse), but although ``watch_stop`` performs an asynchronous
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``create`` operation it doesn't return a deferred we can synchronize
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on. We simply need to return its result:
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.. patch::
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This makes no difference to the original code, but allows us to write
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our test:
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.. patch::
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.. [#DOM-building] they are not alternative solutions: they work very
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well together. Templates are used to build "just
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DOM", sub-widgets are used to build DOM subsections
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*and* delegate part of the behavior (e.g. events
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handling).
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.. _javascript module:
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http://addyosmani.com/resources/essentialjsdesignpatterns/book/#modulepatternjavascript
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