It was certainly worth watching the videos in the end because not only does he describe the new features in the page designer really well, he outlines the state of play for the early adopter release.
So while I haven't gone too deep into the new page designer functionality, here are some less obvious features I think are worth mentioning.
New context menu options
I didn't notice the new options under the right-click when viewing components in the rendering/processing accordion options. I guess I missed these because I rarely use the Tree View.So when David Peake pointed them out in this video - I agreed it would be a simple way to improve developer productivity, and I know I'd use them all the time.
- Duplicate
- Delete
- Copy to other page
Well, now it's done in two - but super fast, and no wizards.
Component Context Sensitive Right-Click |
I've been on a project where copying dynamic actions to other pages was done frequently, and since they're a little newer they haven't had the time to perfect minor copy glitches - similar to those that used to appear copying pages in 3.x. Time will tell if this is still an issue, but we've been promised improvement.
Undo - viewing last change
Undo is one of the first features you might spot in the new page designer, but what I didnt' realise was the tooltip text you see when there is stuff to undo. Of course, I spotted this after I logged feedback suggesting we see a list of outstanding changes when we leave an unsaved page.Undo Tooltip |
Autocompletion
When editing page templates I noticed a message under the text area to press ctrl-space to activate autocompletion - nothing happened there nor when using the modal edit (EA1) - but when editing using the Text Editor in the page designer it invokes an autocomplete.Text Editor Autocomplete |
Page designer search
While I did appreciate the search application feature that came with 4.x, I'm really liking this new feature available near the gallery in the middle of the page designer.
Page Designer Search |
Multi-item updates
Former Forms developers will particularly like this one - using the CTRL key you can select multiple heterogenous components and then update common properties in the editor in one go.Multiple components selected |
The property editor (which no doubt I'll continually also call a palette) shows only common properties, and those properties that differ will be shown with a triangle/delta icon with value redacted under a blue shade.
Forms style property palette |
There are also little red triangles above certain properties, but I'm not sure what it indicates. In Forms we saw something like this indicate a value differing from default - but it doesn't seem that here, not are they identifying common attributes. Perhaps the APEX team might elaborate at some point, unless I forgot it mentioned in a video - anyone?
User interface
Something you may have noticed I've missed is commentary regarding other user interfaces. I've just neglected to mention it so far.There are new features regarding the mobile UI which I'll cover in another post some other day - though there may be enough changes for a few posts.
And disappointingly for my current project interests, the tablet UI has been bumped to 5.1. This is a real shame because it's been an interesting challenge to adapt a desktop interface to a 10 inch touch screen environment. I'm keenly awaiting what goodies the APEX team may provide to make this task easier.
-- Is there something you've seen so far that has excited you that I haven't covered?
The little red triangles represent required fields but you've probably already figured that out since posting =)
ReplyDeleteYeah, I think Patrick pointed that out for me when the blog was using g+ comments. I slapped myself in the face.
ReplyDelete